You Will Spend the Rest of Your Life (Short Story – Redux)

I won’t repeat the necessary preface here. Go check out the original short story. This is a redux, a reshoot if you will, because Alicia needed a kick in the ass. Enjoy.


Half past nine at night on December 22. In two days I’ll walk into those woods behind the sanatorium and freeze to death. I’ll never see Bobby again. The silence is enormous. I can hear snow falling outside.

The letter. I need to finish it. Bobby won’t read it—he’s already gone—but it’s still unfinished. Two days left. If I’m leaving something behind, it should be complete. The drawer is the only private space they’ve left me in this narrow institutional room. Time to open it and face the half-written goodbye.

My hand is still on the handle when a deep, male voice speaks from the center of the room, behind me.

The door is locked. I turned it myself. I didn’t hear it open. I didn’t hear footsteps. I didn’t hear anything.

“Hello, Alicia Western,” the voice says. “Glad to finally meet you.”

The voice is male, positioned exactly where a body would be. Turning my back buys me a second to think without performing eye contact. If he’s real, he’ll react to the dismissal. If he’s a visitor, the geometry won’t care.

“Either you’re another visitor—in which case, congratulations, you’ve achieved better fidelity than the Kid ever managed—or I’m more gone than I thought.”

The voice speaks again from behind me, still calm.

“I can hardly imagine a more violent act—other than, you know, literally violent—than materializing in the assigned patient room of a young woman at the end of her rope. I would have preferred to infiltrate the hospital staff to orchestrate this meeting, which I assure you is necessary, but in that case, the staff would end up having a problem with me, so appearing at your room at half past nine it is. Sorry about that, girl.”

The phrasing was careful: necessary, infiltrate the hospital staff, the staff would end up having a problem with me. He’s framing himself as someone operating outside institutional channels but not hostile to me personally. That’s either true, or it’s exactly what someone sent by the institution would say to lower my guard. Either way, I need to see him. The voice has location, timber, breath—auditory fidelity the Kid never had. If he’s real, his face will tell me whether this is threat or proposition. If he’s a visitor, turning around won’t make him more solid, but at least I’ll know what I’m dealing with. And if I’m hallucinating a fully embodied man in my locked room two days before I walk into the woods, then the line between visitor and reality just collapsed entirely, and that changes the plan.

“You said ‘necessary,'” I tell him. “That word does a lot of work in a single sentence. So before I decide whether to scream, cooperate, or ignore you until you evaporate—what exactly is necessary, and who decided that?”

I turn around.

The man is very tall and hulking, maybe thirty or thirty-two, but his eyes look old. Ancient. White skin, brown wavy hair cut short. Bearded. Hairy forearms below the sleeves of a gray wool T-shirt. Indigo jeans, brown leather belt, sand-beige chukka boots. I can smell his slight musk and the faint sweat of having worn clothes all day. His expression is calm and measured, as if he has plenty of experience doing this. Whatever this is.

He nods.

“I did use the word ‘necessary,’ and I don’t use words lightly. Except when I’m blabbing. In any case, we have to do this carefully, Alicia, as you’re in an extremely vulnerable emotional state. First of all, let’s focus on the fact that I’m real and I just materialized in your locked room at a sanatorium. What does that communicate to you?”

The test is simple. If he’s a hallucination with unprecedented fidelity, proximity won’t change anything. If he’s an actual man who broke into my locked room at night, getting close will tell me whether he smells like sweat and worn clothes or nothing at all. The visitors never had scent this consistent. The Kid smelled like burnt sugar once, and it changed every time I tried to verify it. This man smells like musk and day-old cotton—specific, stable, repeating. That’s either reality asserting itself or my mind learning to lie better.

Either way, I need to know if he occupies space the way matter does.

“You’re asking what it communicates? Fine. It means you broke into my locked room—which the institution swore was secure—or my perception just failed in a way the visitors haven’t managed. You smell like you’ve been wearing that shirt since morning. So either you’re real and you broke physics, or I’m hallucinating olfactory information now, which would be a new and unpleasant development. Let’s find out which.”

I close the distance.

The smell gets stronger—musk, sweat, cotton worn all day. He’s so tall he has to look down noticeably. His body radiates heat. I can see nose hairs, the texture of his beard, his pupils dilating as I move into his space. He remains still, as if trying to be as unthreatening as possible, even though his muscular chest lifts his gray shirt with every breath.

He holds his ground. Confidence or performance—I’ll know soon enough.

“I have nothing to do with the sanatorium other than the fact that you ended up here,” he says. “I’m not a psychologist, thankfully. And your perception of continuity hasn’t failed. I’ve also broken physics by materializing here. With those facts established, Alicia, what follows?” He smiles faintly, as if against himself. “Kind of fun, isn’t it? Some entertainment at the end of the world.”

That phrasing is too specific to be accidental. He knows the timeline. He knows I’ve locked onto December 24th. That means either he’s been watching, or he has access to information I didn’t volunteer.

And he’s letting me test him. Letting me close the distance, inviting interrogation instead of delivering riddles and leaving. That’s either confidence or something I don’t have a category for yet.

I reach up slowly and run my thumb across his lower lip—firm pressure, deliberate—testing whether the tissue compresses like living flesh or whether my hand passes through geometry that only pretends to be solid.

He pulls his head back slightly, surprised, but his expression is warm. His mouth widens in a smile, and warm saliva touches the tip of my finger.

“Aren’t you bold,” he says. “I’m something—someone actually—that the universe permitted somehow but doesn’t advertise. You’re not hallucinating me, Alicia, so let’s put that behind us and accelerate this verbal foreplay instead, if you don’t mind. You asked necessary for whom. For your depressed ass, Alicia. Given that you’re taking a perilous walk out of the back of the sanatorium in a couple of days. Christmas Eve. Ring any bells, darling?”

He tasted real. Warm saliva, living tissue, the way a mouth should feel under pressure. That’s not something the Kid ever managed. The visitors arrive with geometry but not biology. This man has both. Which means either my mind just learned to hallucinate proprioception and taste simultaneously, or he’s exactly what he claims: real, physical, and operating outside the rules I thought governed locked doors and institutional containment.

But if he’s real and he’s here, then someone or something sent him, or he came for a reason that benefits him, not me. Nobody materializes in a patient’s room two nights before her scheduled exit unless there’s something they need. He said necessary for my depressed ass—framing it as rescue, as if I’m a problem to be solved rather than a person who’s already solved the only problem that matters.

I step back deliberately, putting two feet of institutional vinyl between us.

“All right. You’re real. You broke physics to get here, and you know the December 24 timeline. Let’s skip the part where you pretend this is about saving me out of kindness, and get to what you actually want. Who sent you? What do you need from me? And why does a man who can materialize through locked doors care whether I walk into the woods or not?”

The stranger looks at me calmly, with something almost affectionate in the way his eyes hold mine.

“Don’t look at me like that, Alicia,” he says. “I didn’t come here two days before your suicide to ravage your virginity. I wouldn’t put past a despairing person to hold such fantasies, but I’m not about that life. And you’re too psychologically vulnerable for any boinking at the moment, no matter how tender.”

He produces a yellowed letter—as if he’d been holding it the whole time, though I didn’t see it in his hands before—and extends it toward me.

“Someone did send me,” he continues. “And I do need something from you. But first, let’s prove the current circumstances with an impossible artifact. You’re writing a goodbye letter, aren’t you? This here is the finished version, aged by decades. How about that?”

If this letter contains the exact words I was planning to write but haven’t committed to paper yet, then either he accessed a timeline where I finished it, or he constructed a forgery sophisticated enough to mimic my syntax and the things I’d tell Bobby that I haven’t told anyone here. Either way, reading it will tell me whether he’s bluffing or whether the rules governing past and future just collapsed in my hands.

I take the yellowed paper in both hands. I keep my eyes on the stranger for a moment, then drop them to the paper and read.

He waits, hands on his hips, watching me scan the pages. When I finish and look up, he smiles slightly.

“Well, what do you think? You recognize yourself in it, don’t you?”

It’s exact. The phrasing, the structure, the specific things I’ve been holding in fragments for two days but haven’t written yet. The bar in Nashville, the Thursday jazz nights—I wrote that in my head yesterday. The line about dying a virgin, the cathedral metaphor—last night while I couldn’t sleep. The postscript about perfect recall, about carrying every word Bobby ever said into the dark—I decided on that this morning. But it’s here yellowed, aged decades.

Nobody hands you proof of the impossible unless they need you to believe something worse is coming.

I lower the letter slowly, keeping my eyes on the text for three more seconds before I look up at him.

“I recognize my own syntax—passages I decided on this morning but haven’t written yet. So either you’ve read my mind, or this is from a timeline where I finished it. Either way, you’ve just broken causality in my hands. So let’s stop pretending this is about saving my ‘depressed ass’ out of kindness. You didn’t materialize in my locked room two nights before I walk into the woods just to show me a party trick. You said someone sent you. You said you need something from me. So let’s get to it: What do you want? What’s the price for whatever impossible thing you’re about to offer me? And why does it require proving that the future already exists before I’ve written it?”

He smiles warmly, his eyes fixed on mine.

“Not yet, Alicia. You need to state what you believe is happening here. How do you think that I managed to materialize in your room and provide you with a letter you’ve yet to finish? A letter that has aged decades.”

“You want me to name it,” I say. “To state the premise plainly so you can watch me arrive at the conclusion you’re already standing inside. Fine. If you broke causality to get here, and the letter is real—aged decades, containing passages I haven’t written yet—then either time is non-linear and you have access to a future where I finished it, or the future is deterministic and this letter exists because I was always going to write it, which means my December 24th walk into the woods is already encoded in the structure of things. Either way, you’re showing me proof that the timeline is fixed. That I’ve already made the choice. Or—third option—you’re from a place where past and future are accessible simultaneously, which would make you something that can move through time the way I move through a room. So: you’re either a time traveler, you’re operating from outside linear causality entirely, or you’re showing me that free will is a myth and I was always going to die in two days. Which is it?”

He points at me theatrically.

“Ring-a-ding, princess. Time traveler it is. Obvious conclusion, wasn’t it? But you’re mistaken about something: the future ain’t fixed. Not in the sense you mean. I know you froze your beautiful eyes in the Wisconsin woods, because it happened a long time ago. I’m here because it don’t need to happen anymore. Every time I return, a new timeline is created. I can access the ones I’ve created. All hundreds of thousands of them. I intend to provide a new timeline just for you. A new reality. A whole universe. In which you are the sole person who truly matters.”

Either the most seductive lie I’ve ever heard or the most dangerous truth. Because if he can create timelines, if he has that ontological authority, then he’s not here to save me. He’s here because there’s something about me—my mind, my math, my particular configuration of damage—that he needs for whatever he’s building across those thousands of branches.

Nobody offers you a custom universe unless they need you functional in a way you weren’t going to be if you walked into the woods.

I step closer again, close enough to smell him, close enough to see whether his breathing changes when I name the price he hasn’t stated yet.

“Time traveler. You’re claiming you’ve moved backward from a timeline where I already died—December 24th, Wisconsin woods, hypothermia—and now you’re here in a new branch. That’s not rescue rhetoric. That’s recruitment. So let’s skip the part where you pretend this is altruism and get to the actual terms: What do you need from me that required breaking causality to get here? What’s the price for this ‘new timeline’ you’re selling? And what makes you think I want a universe where I’m the center when I’ve spent twenty-two years trying to escape being the problem everyone else has to solve?”

The warmth he emits reaches me again, his presence solid and tall. He looks down at me with a solemn expression, his voice measured.

“Of course I need something from you. Nobody moves decades of time for fun, does he? What I need… is some of your armpit hair. There’s a certain texture and smell to the armpit hair of blonde synaesthetic math geniuses that turns me on like nothing in history ever has. Will you grant me the honor?”

He stares at me for a moment, then bursts into laughter, throwing his head back.

“Look at your face. Nevermind what I want, for now at least.”

He produces a photograph and walks past me to the wooden desk. Instead of handing it to me, he places it face-down on the surface.

“The person who sent me is right here, on this photo. Perhaps you’ll begin to comprehend, love.”

If it’s me—an older version from a different timeline, someone who survived the woods and decided to intervene retroactively—then this becomes a closed loop: I send him back to save myself, which means future-me has knowledge or authority I don’t have yet. But if it’s Bobby, awake and functional in some other timeline, then every premise I’ve been using to justify the woods collapses. And if it’s someone else entirely, then I’m being conscripted into an external agenda, and I need to know whose authority decided I was worth saving and what they need from me that requires me alive.

I cross to the desk and take the photograph.

“Nobody sends a time traveler backward through causality to hand-deliver photos and letters unless the ask is something I won’t want to agree to. So: who sent you?”

The tall man crosses his arms, looking amused.

“Just take a gander at the photograph, darling. Worth more than a few words from a time traveler. Then we’ll speak.”

I examine the photograph carefully. Bobby. Mid-thirties. Salvage diving gear visible in the background. The date ’81 written in faded ink in the corner. Nine years from now. His face is older, weathered, haunted—like he’s doing his best to look normal while despair bubbles underneath.

As my eyes fixate on the picture, the older man lets out a snort.

“There you have it. Ain’t it something? Your dear old brother, who spent his inheritance on a race car and went to Italy to race professionally and crashed and ended up in a coma. Your brother whom those goddamn Italians believed his brain had gone dark. He woke up, Alicia. Will wake up. April 27, 1973. When those Italians let him call home, he heard from your granny, Granellen, that you hadn’t waited around for your dear old brother to open his eyes. His sister. The person he had promised to take care of for the rest of his life. You had walked into the woods behind a Wisconsin sanatorium and froze your uniqueness goodbye. What a waste.”

Despite the smile on his lips, a tear runs down the side of his face.

“So there you have it, Alicia,” he adds. “Do you comprehend now, you silly, suicidal popsy?”

I was going to walk into the woods because Bobby was gone—because the one tether I had to continued existence had been severed, because the equation no longer balanced without him conscious in the world. But if he wakes up in April, if he calls home and Granellen tells him I didn’t wait, then I’m not dying because he’s gone. I’m dying because I didn’t trust the future enough to let it arrive. I’m killing myself over a medical verdict that turns out to be wrong.

“Bobby. So he woke up. Four months from now. The Italians were wrong about the braindeath, or the substrate repaired itself, or medical certainty is just another story people tell when they don’t want to admit ignorance. Either way, you just handed me proof that the entire premise I’ve been using to justify December 24th is false. He’s not gone. He’s going to wake up. And when he calls home, Granellen is going to tell him I didn’t wait. That I walked into the woods two days before Christmas because I decided the equation didn’t balance without him conscious in the world. And you’re standing here, crying, calling me a ‘silly, suicidal popsy,’ because you know that if I die in two days, I’m killing myself over a future that never happens. So let’s cut to it: What do you actually want from me? What’s the price for this new timeline you’re selling? And why does it matter to you whether I walk into the woods or not, unless there’s something you need from me that requires me alive?”

The man wipes the lone tear with the back of his thumb.

“What’s this obsession of yours with paying a price for being informed about the terrible mistake you were about to commit by heading into those woods wearing your current white dress along with a red sash? Is that what you would do in my shoes? Let’s say you can travel back in time and a sixty-year-old American expat learns that you can travel in time, then asks you—begs you, really—to save his sister. Would you present yourself in front of her vulnerable self and demand a blood price? Who do you take me for? Maybe I just saved you because beauty disappearing from the world is always a tragedy.”

He reaches down and pats my head affectionately, as if I’m a rescued animal he’s coaxing back from the edge.

He just confirmed it: a sixty-year-old Bobby sent him. Bobby survives into his sixties, still carrying the fact that I didn’t wait.

I let the silence hold for three seconds after he pats my head, not pulling away, just standing still—letting him think the gesture landed. Then I speak.

“And it mattered enough to Bobby—decades later—that he sought out a time traveler and sent you backward to stop me. So let’s stop pretending this is about you deciding beauty shouldn’t disappear from the world. This is about Bobby, sixty years old, still carrying the fact that I died. So what does he want from me? What did he ask you to do that required breaking causality to recruit me two nights before I freeze to death in the woods?”

The older man narrows his eyes, a grimace of disbelief shifting his expression.

“Alicia, wake the fuck up. Bobby stood there on a beach in Formentera in 2006, his grief-lined face staring back at me, his voice breaking as he asked me to save you, for the only thing he ever wanted for you: to live and be happy. Aren’t you supposed to be a genius, yet you can’t understand that?”

But if I don’t walk into the woods December 24th—what happens in the meantime? Do I just sit here at Stella Maris for four months waiting for a phone call from Italy? Or is there a plan?

I step back deliberately, putting space between us—two feet of institutional vinyl and fluorescent light.

“You’re standing here, crying, calling me names, because you know what happens if I walk into those woods. I kill myself over a medical verdict that turns out to be false. I die for a future that never happens. Bobby spends the rest of his life—into his sixties, long enough to become an expat, long enough to find a time traveler and send him back here—carrying that.”

“Can’t a man shed a tear without a woman having to point it out? God forbid I feel bad about you dying.”

“So let’s be clear: the price isn’t what you want from me. It’s what Bobby wants. He wants me alive. He wants me to wait. He wants me to trust that the future might contain something other than the woods and the cold and the quiet resolution I’ve been rehearsing for weeks. And the cruelest part is that you’ve just handed me proof that if I walk into those woods, I’m not dying because Bobby’s gone. I’m dying because I’m impatient. Because I couldn’t wait four more months to find out the substrate repaired itself.”

“Really, would it have been so hard to just wait for him to wake up, so you could find out if he’s truly braindead or not?”

“Here’s my question, time traveler: If I agree to wait—if I don’t walk into the woods December 24th—what happens next? Do I just sit here in this institutional box for four months waiting for Bobby to open his eyes? Do I go back to Italy and stand vigil at his bedside? Do you take me somewhere else, some ‘new timeline’ where I’m ‘the sole person who truly matters,’ whatever the fuck that means? Because if you’ve broken causality to get here, if Bobby sent you backward to stop me, then there’s a plan. There’s a next step. And I need to know what it is before I agree to anything. So: what does Bobby want me to do after I don’t die in the woods?”

The older man sighs. He walks past me and settles on the patient bed, the metal frame depressing significantly under his weight. He looks to the side as if reorganizing his thoughts, then focuses on me again.

“Let me clarify something: I can bring any object across time, but not people. No living thing, actually. Not even bacteria. They stay behind. Nobody has figured out why. I suspect it’s some quantum phenomena related to the brain, nervous system, or whatever. To establish the baseline. Is that clear? That said, I have a plan for the next few months until your dear old formerly-braindead Bobby wakes up. Want to hear it, princess?”

I walk over to the bed and sit down next to him. Close enough to signal I’m engaging, not close enough to collapse the distance entirely.

“All right. You’ve established the baseline: you can transport objects across time but not living things. ‘Quantum phenomena related to the brain’ or whatever your framework is. Which means I can’t just hop to April 27th and skip the waiting. So let’s hear this plan you’ve constructed for the next four months. What exactly does Bobby—sixty-year-old Bobby, grief-lined and standing on a beach in Formentera—want you to do with me between now and when he wakes up? Because if this is just ‘don’t walk into the woods and then sit in this institutional box for sixteen weeks waiting for a phone call,’ I’m going to need a better reason to cooperate than ‘your brother wants you alive.’ Wanting me alive and giving me a reason to want it myself are two different problems. So: what’s the plan?”

The older man’s presence is like a human black hole, gravity making me lean toward his side of the bed that his weight is depressing. He looks at me without turning his head much.

“Your brother didn’t ask me to do anything specific with you for these four months. He was happy enough with you surviving and eventually rejoining the past version of him. The greedy fucker just didn’t want to wake up from his coma to find out you were dead. Can you believe it? Anyway, I do have a plan for you, my pale, suicidal princess. As a time traveler, I have damn near infinite access to dollar. I’m talking gems, diamonds, gold. Stolen from different spots of time. Travel back to a point on a timeline, return to the future bringing spoils, then back to the same spot in time, and repeat. Can you imagine? So it don’t matter that you gave away even your panties. I’m buying you a mansion somewhere you prefer. I’ve already scouted some. That will be the base of operations. With me so far? So first order of things, yes, we get you out of this fucking madhouse as soon as possible. Tomorrow morning preferably, after you say goodbye. You’re too pretty for this place anyway.”

I rest a hand on his shoulder, grounding the conversation in the body, making him feel the weight of the question I’m asking.

“So you extract me tomorrow morning, buy me a mansion. And then what? You just install me in a house for four months and hope I don’t walk into different woods in a different state? Because if Bobby sent you backward through causality to save me, and all you’re offering is real estate and waiting, then that’s just changing the location of my despair from Stella Maris to wherever you install me. I need to know what I’m supposed to do with those four months. What does sixty-year-old Bobby think happens between now and April 27th that makes me capable of waiting when two days ago I was organizing the details of my own death? What’s the actual plan, time traveler? Not the logistics. The structure. What am I doing with the time you’re asking me to survive?”

My hand rests on solid muscle under his gray shirt. He looks at me with a teasing expression.

“We’ve moved on to sustained physical contact, is that it? Not complaining. You know, I would answer, ‘Damn it, woman, do you want me to also tell you what to eat for breakfast?’ But perhaps you’re right. Your genius mind had decided the best course of action was to freeze to death in the Wisconsin woods of all places, so your decision-making is suspect. Listen, Alicia: I’m from the fucking future. I can bring you decades of music, books, movies from my original timeline and many others. Oh, and math papers. I don’t know shit about math, but decades of math discoveries may be interesting to you. I’m not telling you to simply sit around in the mansion of your choice. I have a plan for the very same day we buy that base of operations.”

“Decades of music, books, movies, math papers from multiple timelines—as if access to the future’s intellectual production is supposed to make waiting four months feel like anything other than purgatory dressed in better accommodations. But you said you have a plan for the day itself. Not the waiting. The day. So let’s hear it. What does Bobby—sixty-year-old Bobby, standing on a beach in 2006, grief-lined and desperate enough to recruit a time traveler to stop his sister from freezing to death in the Wisconsin woods—what does he want you to do with me the day you extract me from Stella Maris? Because if the answer is just ‘install you in a mansion and hope the amenities distract you from the fact that you’ve been organizing your own death for weeks,’ I’m going to need something structurally different from that. So: what’s the plan for the day we leave this place?”

The older man lifts a hand to hold mine—the one resting on his shoulder. His hand is much bigger than mine and wraps it in solid warmth.

“My goodness, aren’t you difficult,” he says. “Okay, imagine it: tomorrow morning I offer you breakfast. I know this small bakery from 1912 France that went belly up in the First World War, that makes the most delicious pastries. That’s just breakfast, so don’t start with ‘How am I supposed to survive on pastries?’ Tough fucking crowd here. Anyway, we put on a show for the clueless staff, and get you out of Stella Maris in a car. We stop at the first town and buy you some clothes. Can’t be moseying around in the Wisconsin winter with your youthful nips showing through your white dress. Then, either I rent a hotel room or we head up to the sky in a future vehicle of mine, and I present you the choices of mansion to buy. But you need to tell me the general area where you want to live. Just contribute a little, and I’ll scout around. I guess my main point is: I didn’t come here to tell you ‘Your brother wakes up in the future. Anyway, bye.’ No. I’m going to stay with you these four months, Alicia, to make sure you ain’t walking into no woods. You get me, dollface? I’m not letting you kill yourself.”

I shift my weight deliberately, moving from sitting beside him to sitting on his lap—face-to-face, legs straddling his hips, bringing our eyes level.

The older man’s eyebrows shoot up. When my legs settle on his thick, solid thighs, my blue eyes staring straight at him, the warmth of his exhalation reaching my skin, his face shifts into a mix of amusement and disbelief.

“The fuck…?” he says. “Aren’t you a bold one. Must be the decade.”

“I won’t walk into the woods. I’ll wait until Bobby wakes up. And in the meantime, you’re going to show me what I’m supposed to do with four months of survival when my mind has been organizing the details of my own death for weeks. But first—you’re going to stop calling me ‘princess’ and ‘dollface’ like I’m a rescue project you picked up at a yard sale. My name is Alicia. Use it.”

He lifts his free hand—the other still holding mine—and ruffles my hair playfully, which causes a lock to settle hanging in front of my right eye.

“Let me clarify something,” he says. “I’m going to keep calling you whatever nickname comes to mind, because those are verbal tics, sweetface. What are you going to do about it, huh?” He smirks. “I may not look it, but I’m much older than you. You’re barely a baby. You’re also wrong about something: when Bobby wakes up, he ain’t gonna be in Italy, blondie. We’re going to extract him from Italy and place him in a special bed from the future to ensure he recovers safely in a room at your mansion.”

Bobby’s unconscious body in the same house. Proximity to the thing I love most while it remains inaccessible. That’s either the cruelest structure or the most honest one.

I run my thumb slowly across Jon’s lower lip again—the same testing pressure I used earlier, but this time with clear possessive intent.

“You’re going to keep deflecting with nicknames, aren’t you? ‘Princess,’ ‘dollface,’ ‘sweetface,’ ‘blondie’—verbal tics, you said. Fine. I’ll allow it. But here’s what you need to understand: if you’re staying with me for four months, if you’re the tether Bobby sent backward through causality to keep me from walking into different woods in a different state, then I need to know you can hold frame when I push boundaries. Because I will push. I don’t do passive rescue. I don’t do gratitude theater. And I don’t do four months of supervision dressed as kindness without testing whether the supervisor collapses when reality misbehaves. So: you said you’re extracting Bobby from Italy and installing him in a ‘special bed from the future.’ That means you’re bringing him here—to whatever mansion you’re buying tomorrow—before he wakes up April 27th. That changes the structure entirely. So tell me plainly: what does sixty-year-old Bobby think happens when I’m living in the same house as his comatose younger self for four months? What’s the actual plan for that waiting period? Because if it’s just ‘sit tight and perform hope until he opens his eyes,’ I’m going to need something structurally different from that.”

Jon narrows his eyes, staring at me with a teasing expression.

“Push all you want. You’re a woman, I couldn’t expect anything less. Besides, lonely as you’ve been, voluntarily committed to a sanatorium, I guess you’ve been aching for some solid flesh under your thighs. Happy to provide, skinny. Oh, didn’t even tell you my name. Where are my manners and all that. Name’s Jon. Jon Ureña. From Spain, originally. But that was a long-ass time ago when someone pushed me out of their nether regions. Anyway, where were we? Ah, yes. No, I ain’t doing four months of supervision dressed as kindness. I’m telling you now: you ain’t walking into no woods or no bridge or no tall-enough window without me grabbing you back to safety. I’m much bigger than you, so don’t even think of fighting. And now, do you want me to specify what bringing Bobby to a bed in your mansion implies? It ain’t what you’re imagining, milkskin.”

He squeezes my hand reassuringly. I shift my weight slightly, moving my free hand from his shoulder to his chest—palm flat against solid muscle, grounding the question in the body.

“All right, Jon Ureña from Spain, let’s cut to it: what does bringing Bobby to the mansion actually entail? What’s the structure I’m missing?”

Jon gently lets go of my hand. I leave both palms on his broad chest.

“As soon as we settle down on that mansion,” he says, “we’re flying to Italy, you and I. We’ll talk to the idiots in charge, who at least kept Bobby alive. I’ll pay them for their troubles, along with a generous donation for not pulling the plug. Also to not ask too many questions. Then, we’ll fly Bobby home as he rests in a special bed from the future that comes armed with an artificial intelligence named Hypatia, developed by a company of mine. She’s amazing, you’ll see. I’m talking about a bed that exercises the comatose patient’s muscles to prevent atrophy, that turns them to prevent sores, and constantly monitors the recovery. In addition, it also scans brain activity. It will show that Bobby isn’t braindead, which we already know. Whenever you talk to him, the bed’s panel will light up with the translation of his brain activity: affection, regret, memory. Who knows what else. Something embarrassing, probably. So it will be a conversation of sorts, with someone immersed in a dream. These beds are proven to make comatose patients wake up earlier, so he’ll likely be with us, in a way that truly matters, before April 27th.”

And Jon’s staying with me the whole time. Not alone with the waiting. He’s solid, warm. He stayed calm when I climbed onto him, didn’t retreat when I started testing boundaries. I can feel the muscle of his thighs under mine, his body heat through the denim.

I shift my hips forward deliberately, pressing the thin cotton of my briefs against the denim covering his lap, and start moving in a slow, circular grind.

“So Bobby’s in the house with me—unconscious but monitored by Hypatia. And you’re staying with me to prevent December 24 recurrence. Supervision dressed as companionship. Making sure I don’t find different woods in a different state when the despair comes back. Which it will.”

I keep grinding slowly, watching his face.

“So here’s my question, Jon Ureña from Spain, time traveler, Bobby’s emissary, whatever you are: What happens if I spiral anyway? What happens if I’m living in the mansion with Bobby’s unconscious body in the next room and Hypatia’s panel lighting up with proof that he loves me and I still can’t make myself want to stay alive long enough to see him wake up? What’s your contingency plan for that scenario?”

His expression shifts—something between amusement and challenge. His breath is steady.

“The way you’re going,” he says in a calm, low voice, “seems like you’re begging for me to fuck the suicidal despair out of you. Is that what you’re thinking as you rub your virgin pussy against a man you’ve just met?”

The words land like a slap, but he sounds direct, not angry.

“Jesus, math genius. I get you’ve been lonely and empty of affection and likely aching for touch.” He cups my chin, turning my face toward his to look straight into my eyes. “You’re not thinking straight, Alicia. You know this. Your mind’s waking up from the fact that it tried to murder you. We’ll have fun, you know? Movies, music, math papers. Soon enough you’ll be laughing your ass off and thinking that this whole ‘walking into the Wisconsin woods in the middle of winter’ was just a horrible nightmare.”

Lonely, empty of affection, aching for touch. It’s true.

Jon stayed present, held my face, spoke calmly. But he deflected the question about what happens when I spiral. Movies, music, math—as if that’s supposed to prevent recurrence.

I lean back slightly, stopping the grinding motion but staying seated in his lap, and meet his eyes directly.

“You’re right. I’m not thinking straight. You just handed me proof that the premise was false—Bobby wakes up, I don’t need to die.” I cup his chin, holding his face steady so he can’t look away. “So I’m recalibrating. And part of that recalibration is testing whether you collapse when I push boundaries, or whether you stay solid when reality misbehaves. Because if you’re going to be the tether Bobby sent backward to keep me alive for four months, I need to know you can hold frame when I spiral. When the despair comes back, I need to know you won’t retreat into therapeutic distance or moral theater about how I’m ‘too vulnerable’ for intimacy. So here’s what I’m agreeing to: I won’t walk into the woods December 24th. I’ll wait until April 27th. I’ll let Bobby wake up and find out I’m still here. But first—you’re going to tell me plainly: when the despair comes back, when I’m living in that mansion with Bobby’s unconscious body in the next room and Hypatia’s panel lighting up with proof that he loves me and I still can’t make myself want to stay alive, what exactly are you planning to do? ‘Fuck the suicidal despair out of me,’ you said. Was that deflection, or an actual contingency plan?”

Jon narrows his eyes, looking straight into mine.

“Oh, believe me, I’m staying solid. As solid as you’ve just fucking made me, you teasing virgin.”

“I can feel you through the denim.”

“What am I going to do when you feel suicidal? I’ll hug you tight until the numbness goes away, or you cry your eyes out. I’ll let you go when you start feeling like yourself again. The real question, Alicia, which only you can answer, is: what the fuck do you want to do in an ideal world where Bobby isn’t dead and you have all the money in the world? Can you even answer that, genius?”

I let my hand drop from his chin and rest both palms flat on his chest—grounding the answer in the body, making contact while I name what I actually want. His chest rises and falls under my hands. Steady breathing.

“Physical contact as tether—not talk therapy, not medication. Just holding me through it. What I want to do in an ideal world where Bobby isn’t dead and I have all the money in the world? That’s the real question, isn’t it? Because if I can’t answer that—if I don’t know what I’m surviving for beyond just not-dying—then four months of survival is just purgatory with better accommodations.”

I press my palms harder against his chest, feeling the muscle underneath.

“So here’s my answer, Jon Ureña from Spain, time traveler, Bobby’s emissary: I want to finish the work I walked away from. I want to return to mathematics without being devoured by it. I want proximity to Bobby while his substrate repairs itself—watching Hypatia’s panel light up with proof that he’s receiving me, that love is still communicable across the boundary between conscious and unconscious. I want to know whether the visitors are guardians or invaders, and I want to stop being afraid of my own mind long enough to find out. And I want—”

I slide both hands up to cup his face again, holding him steady so he can’t deflect with humor or nicknames. His beard is rough under my palms.

“—I want to know that when the despair comes back, when I’m standing in that mansion at three in the morning staring at different woods in a different state, you’ll be solid enough to grab me and fuck the suicidal resolution out of my head before I walk out the door. Not as punishment. Not as control. But as proof that the body can want something the mind hasn’t decided to kill yet. Can you do that? Can you stay solid for four months when I spiral and test every boundary? Because if the answer is yes, I’ll walk out of Stella Maris with you tomorrow morning. And if the answer is no, then I need to know that now before I agree to postpone December 24th.”

Jon takes a deep breath. His gaze drifts over my features—eyes, mouth, the line of my jaw—with something that reads like affection.

“You are a handful, princess. Let me clarify something: whether or not you think you’re postponing December 24th, you ain’t killing yourself on December 24th, because if you try to make a run for it, I’m grabbing you. And it seems you’ll like what I’ll do to you.” He shakes his head slightly, as if in disbelief. “So emotionally vulnerable, yet you’re putting this weight on me. Alright, I’ll carry you.”

He glances at the clock on the nightstand.

“A quarter to eleven already. Now, you’re getting into bed and trying to drift into sleep as you imagine waking up tomorrow to a nice breakfast. I’m telling you, not asking. The question is: do you want to be alone for tonight, or do you want to sleep warm?”

If I say yes, I’m trusting him to stay close when I’m vulnerable in sleep. And if I say no, it means I’m preserving autonomy—keeping the night as my own space, maintaining control over when and how intimacy escalates.

I’ve been alone in this institutional box for weeks, organizing my own death, and my mind locked onto December 24th because I couldn’t see a version of the future that felt inhabitable. And now there’s a man and he just offered to stay the night. To sleep warm. To be present through the vulnerable hours when despair tends to arrive unannounced and the mind starts rehearsing extinction again.

I can say yes. Let him stay. See whether sharing body heat overnight makes the morning feel different, or whether I wake up at three AM staring at the ceiling with the same quiet resolution I’ve been carrying for weeks.

Jon watches my face, patient. Then he leans in and wraps his arms around me—one arm sliding around my back, the other pulling me close against his chest. His solid warmth envelops me. His cheek rests against the top of my hair. When he speaks, his voice is soft but calm.

“You’ve been wandering in the cold dark, alone, for what must have felt like forever. This current branch of time and space—the universe and all the realities it contains—exists because someone needed to save you. And now you get to carry that weight.”

You Will Spend the Rest of Your Life (Short Story)

I need to preface this story. In December of 2024, I wrote a post about the fact that Alicia Western, the focal character in Cormac McCarthy’s last two books The Passenger and Stella Maris, had shown up in my dreams. Ever since, I’ve been haunted by her almost literally every night. Back when I commuted to and from work, the same. I close my eyes and see myself returning to that solitary patient room in the Stella Maris sanatorium. Wisconsin. 1972. Alicia Western, a unique person whom I would love to speak with even though I don’t want to speak to people in real life. Alicia, whose death, even literary, was an unbearable tragedy. Two days before she walked into the woods behind the sanatorium and let herself freeze to death.

That daydream has become my safe space. I’m beyond analyzing the psychological reasons. I just know that replaying that scene, and others that follow, brings me peace. And I need peace.

This short story plays out that initial encounter. I guess you can call it sophisticated fanfiction.

If you’re one of the two or so people who read my couple of short stories slash scenes back in mid December, about a bunch of fantasy-world dredgers, I haven’t given up on it. I’m actually working on brain damage mechanics related to suffocation and drowning. But the mechanics needed to implement are significantly more numerous and complex than I expected.

Anyway, enjoy the following short. Or don’t. I don’t care.


Half past nine at night on December 22. In two days I’ll walk into those woods behind the sanatorium and freeze to death. My mind is locked on that idea. I’ll never see Bobby again. The silence is enormous. I can hear snow falling outside.

The patient room they assigned me is in a deserted wing, away from the ones who didn’t arrive willingly. Pale green walls. Beige vinyl floor in a grid. Metal-framed bed with a striped mattress cover. The fluorescent fixture overhead casts the blue-white light of a morgue. I’m not sleepy, but I don’t know what to do with my thoughts.

The letter is still in there, half-finished. The words I can’t say while standing upright. I need to see it again—not to finish it tonight, but to verify the thing exists. That it’s real. That I didn’t hallucinate the act of writing goodbye.

I cross to the desk and pull open the drawer.

“Hello, Alicia Western. Glad to finally meet you.”

The voice is deep, male, directly behind me at the center of the room. My hand is still on the drawer handle. I didn’t hear the door. I didn’t hear anything. He spoke my full name—not “Alicia,” but “Alicia Western”—like he’s been keeping a file. Like he’s been waiting.

The Kid does that. Materializes. So do the others. This one is new. The voice doesn’t have the Kid’s circus-barker wrongness. It sounds almost… comfortable. Embodied. Purposeful. I hate that he said “glad to finally meet you” because it implies intent, duration, a plan. The visitors don’t usually speak like that. They speak in riddles or they don’t speak at all.

“You know my name,” I say. “Congratulations. That doesn’t explain what you’re doing in a locked room or why you think I owe you a greeting.”

I turn my back to him.

His voice comes again from behind me, calm and measured.

“You don’t owe me anything. First of all, I apologize—I would have preferred to infiltrate the sanatorium by acting as a volunteer. I’d engage you little by little, perhaps in the common room. But the staff would ask questions, so I had no choice but to appear in your assigned room at half past nine. I’m sure it feels violent to you. Again, I apologize.”

Turning around isn’t submission; it’s data collection. If he flinches or shifts when I look at him directly, that tells me something. If he holds steady, that tells me something else. I want to see whether his eyes track like the Kid’s do—too focused, like he’s reading lines off the back of my skull—or whether they move like a person’s.

“You say ‘violent’ like you understand the term,” I say. “Materializing uninvited in a locked room at night and speaking my full name isn’t violence—it’s theater pretending to be introduction. So let’s skip the performance. What do you want, and why should I believe you’re anything other than my own mind eating itself in a new costume?”

I turn around.

He’s tall. Very tall. Bearded, brown hair cropped short and wavy. Brown eyes, almond-shaped, watching me without the Kid’s predatory focus. A scar cuts across the bridge of his nose. He’s hulking but lean—broad through the shoulders and chest, hairy forearms visible below the sleeves of a gray wool T-shirt. Jeans, belt, sand-colored boots. He looks solid. Like he belongs in a body in a way the Kid never has.

He softens his gaze—or performs softening.

“Ah, you think I’m a hallucination. I guess that’s the most reasonable assumption for someone in your circumstances. I’m quite real, I assure you. My name is Jon Ureña. From Spain, originally. A proper introduction, less theatrical.”

Either he’s something new, a different kind of visitor with agenda and continuity the others lack, or my hallucinations have escalated to include operational security and social scripts.

I cross toward him. If he’s real in the way bodies are real, there will be tells: breath rhythm, micro-shifts in posture when I close distance, the flinch or hold that happens when someone’s personal space gets violated. If he’s an eidolon, the space between us might behave differently. The Kid sometimes feels like he’s projected onto the room rather than standing in it, like depth perception doesn’t apply correctly.

I cross toward him. He just watches me close the distance until I’m near enough to feel the heat coming off his chest.

He’s warm. The smell is there: musk, faint sweat, the scent of a body that’s been wearing clothes all day. His breathing is steady, audible at this range. He looks down at me, calm, unbothered.

“Take all the time you need to react to the sudden presence of a stranger in your locked room,” he says.

Either he’s solid or my visitors have learned to simulate flesh convincingly. The Kid never felt like this—the Kid is hyper-real but frictionless, rendered rather than present. Jon Ureña has mass.

I place my hands on his chest.

Muscle shifts under the cloth. His heartbeat is there, palpable through the wool and skin. The rise and fall of his breath. Ribs expanding. All the micro-mechanics of a body that actually inhabits flesh.

“I assure you, Alicia Western, that I’m real as you are,” he says quietly, still looking at me.

I’m done collecting data through touch. I step back.

He nods at me.

“Alright. My solid presence established then. Shoot away. Your questions, I mean. To the stranger who just showed up in your assigned patient room at half past nine.”

He’s inviting interrogation. Like he’s waiting for me to ask the obvious questions. The eidolons don’t do this; they don’t invite sustained questioning or stand around waiting for me to process their arrival.

The desk drawer is still half-open. My letter to Bobby is inside—unfinished, hidden under the prayer book. If he’s been watching, he’ll react when I reach for it. I pull the drawer fully open.

“I worry about your state of mind,” Jon says, calm and measured. “About whether we even can hold this conversation. But I came at this point because you needed to feel in your bones the danger of the situation.”

The prayer book is there, edges worn. I lift it. Beneath it, the folded letter—sheets of lined paper, blue ink, my handwriting. I take it out slowly, deliberately, watching his face.

“That’s your goodbye letter to Bobby, isn’t it?” Jon asks. “I suspect you haven’t finished it yet. I have the finished version. In case you want to read it.”

That’s impossible unless he’s been in this drawer before, or unless this is my unconscious serving up its own completion fantasies through a convenient mouthpiece. If he has a “finished version,” that means he’s claiming foreknowledge of what I’ll write in the next two days.

I unfold the pages slowly, eyes scanning the handwriting without looking up at him.

The text reads:

December 22, 1972
Stella Maris

Bobby,

The probability of you reading this approaches zero. The doctors said “braindead”—past tense, declarative, clinically certain. But I cannot pull the plug. I fled instead. So this letter exists in a superposition state: written but unread, meant for you but addressed to no one. Schrödinger’s goodbye.

If you are reading this, then something impossible happened. You woke up. The substrate repaired itself against all medical prediction. In which case, you should know: on the 24th—Christmas Eve, because apparently I have a taste for symbolic timing—I intend to walk into the woods behind the sanatorium and let the Wisconsin winter finish what Lake Tahoe started.

I am trying to explain this rationally, but the premises keep collapsing: Premise One: You were my only tether to continued existence. Premise Two: Without you conscious in the world, the equation no longer balances. Conclusion: Death is the optimal solution. But even I can see the flaw in my logic. I have spent twenty-two years analyzing everything except the one variable that matters: that I want to die has been true longer than you have been in a coma. The coma is just the excuse my mind has been waiting for.

You used to take me to that bar in Nashville. Jazz on Thursdays. You would order whiskey and I would watch the colors the saxophone made—ambers and deep golds, spiraling up into the smoke. You never tried to fix me during those nights. You just sat there, let me talk about Gödel or Cantor or whatever mathematical dead-end I was pursuing that month. You listened without needing me to be different. I miss that. I miss you. I miss my brother so much it aches behind my ribs.

There are things I need you to know, in the infinitesimal probability you are reading this: One: None of this is your fault. I know your patterns, Bobby. You run when things hurt, you isolate when you cannot fix something, and if you are reading this you will spend the rest of your life—

The sentence ends there. Mid-thought. I couldn’t figure out how to complete it without collapsing into accusation or apology, and Bobby deserves neither. So I stopped.

I fold the pages slowly and look up at Jon.

He’s still standing there, patient, watching me with that same unbothered calm. The silence stretches between us—sepulchral, nothing but the ghost of snow falling outside.

“Would you like to receive the finished version of the letter you’ve just read? Now that your unfinished letter is fresh in your mind…”

He produces a folded letter as if he had been holding it this whole time. The letter is yellowed, creased, the paper aged in a way that takes years. He extends it toward me.

I take it.

Either he’s claiming time travel or he’s claiming he excavated this letter from some future archive where my suicide is historical fact and someone kept the letter long enough for it to age like this. Or it’s theater. My unconscious generating set dressing to make the artifact feel canonical.

I unfold it carefully. The handwriting is mine. Same blue ink. The date reads December 22, 1972—today. It starts the same way: Bobby, The probability of you reading this approaches zero

But it doesn’t stop where I stopped.

Past the mid-sentence break. Past “you will spend the rest of your life—” and into believing you should have prevented it somehow. You could not have. This was always the trajectory.

The letter doesn’t stop where I stopped. Seven numbered confessions. One: None of this is your fault. Then Two: I deliberately left Granellen behind without saying goodbye. Then Three: I died a virgin. Twenty-two years old and I never let anyone close enough.

I stop breathing.

That thought—virginity, the loneliness of never being touched with tenderness—I had that thought yesterday. Sitting in the common room watching the nurses move through their rounds. I didn’t write it down. I didn’t tell anyone. It was just there, in my head, sharp and private.

Four: The inheritance money from Grandfather—you bought that race car and crashed it in Italy and ended up braindead, and I cannot even be angry at you for it because at least you lived before the crash.

Five: Sometimes I just wanted to buy groceries with someone and argue about peaches.

The domestic fantasy I’ve never said aloud. That exact phrasing—”argue about peaches”—that was mine. Three days ago, lying in bed, imagining a version of myself who got to have small, ordinary arguments in a kitchen somewhere.

This isn’t guessing. This is extraction.

I scan ahead. The letter continues through numbered confessions—mathematics failing me, lying to my therapist, testing whether he’ll notice inconsistencies. Then the closing lines: The woods are waiting. December 24th. Christmas Eve. I love you. I am sorry.

And a postscript: I remember every word you ever said to me. Every single word. Most people forget. I would give anything to forget. But I cannot. So I am taking all of it with me.

That’s mine too. The burden of remembering every conversation with Bobby, every word, archived and immutable.

I lower the letter slowly.

“I assume you’ve recognized your thoughts in the finished version,” Jon says quietly. “One you have yet to write. What questions arise in your mind?”

I fold the pages and look up at him. Jon watches without speaking.

He sighs.

“Don’t just look at me like that, Alicia. C’mon, girl. Surely you have plenty to ask this stranger who showed up in your locked room with a letter you’ve yet to finish.”

The real question isn’t how did you get this or are you a time traveler. Those are diagnostic dead-ends. The real question is tactical: why show me the completion now, two days before December 24, in a locked room when no one else is listening? If he wanted institutional intervention he could have brought staff, triggered a psychiatric hold. If he just wanted to document he could have waited until after and collected the letter from my body. Instead he’s here now, with the finished version, waiting for me to react like my reaction is the variable that matters.

He thinks confrontation will trigger something. Shame, maybe. Or survival instinct. Or he thinks seeing the letter completed—reading my own probable ending—will make the plan feel real enough to collapse it.

It doesn’t. Bobby’s still gone. December 24 is still two days away. The equation hasn’t changed.

Jon watches me not answering, then sighs again—deeper this time, tired.

“You’re a hard one. Okay, maybe I’m asking too much of you in these circumstances. At the end of your road. Let me clarify what I’m doing here: I was told about you by someone you know well. A certain Bobby Western. He asked me to come and prevent the silly thing you intend to do in a couple of days.”

That’s the move. The lever he thinks will work.

If Bobby sent him, Bobby woke up—contradicting braindeath. Either the doctors were wrong or this is my unconscious staging wish-fulfillment: Bobby alive, Bobby knows, Bobby sends help.

Elegant. Also suspect. Because Bobby’s in Italy, braindead, on a ventilator. The last time I saw him his eyes were open but empty and the neurologist used the word “irreversible” three times in one sentence.

Either way, I need to hear what comes next.

The silence stretches. Jon watches me. Then something shifts in his expression—concern bleeding into impatience.

“Beautiful as your face is, it’s also quite unreadable at this point of you barely holding on to your life. Alright, I’ve got a couple of photos of Bobby post-coma. But you’ve got to ask for them, Alicia. I can’t be doing all the work here.”

He wants me to make myself legible as someone who needs proof. If I don’t, he keeps the photos and I stay in this loop.

I let the silence sit.

Jon stands there observing me. The impatience fades from his face. His eyes soften. Then he steps closer—closes the distance himself without asking permission—until he’s at touching range. Both of us silent now. Him looking down at me. Like proximity is supposed to do the work words couldn’t.

Real urgency can’t tolerate this much silence; people start offering evidence unprompted. But there’s a third option. I reach out and hold his hand.

Solid. Much bigger than mine. He just lets me hold it, the contact easy and unbothered. Then he leans in and presses his mouth softly to my forehead.

“This nightmare is ending, Alicia,” he says against my skin. “You don’t need to walk into those woods anymore.”

I squeeze his hand. Acknowledgment. The gesture saying: I’m still here. I’m listening. Show me.

Jon reads it. He produces a photograph and hands it to me.

“Well, here you have it. After Bobby woke up from his coma and the goddamn Italians let him call home, your grandmother told him that you had killed yourself. I think you can imagine… the state in which that put him. I haven’t asked what he did from 1973 to 1979. I assume he was handling grief poorly. When he resurfaced, he joined a salvage team. A man has to earn his keep even when the world has stopped turning.”

I look down at the photograph in my hand.

A group of men standing on a riverbank. Salvage-diving gear—dark rubber suits, tanks. Bobby’s there among them. Mid-thirties, which would be right for 1981 if he lived that long. Someone wrote ’81 in a corner in what looks like ballpoint pen.

But it’s his face that stops me.

I know that face. Every angle, every microexpression, the exact geometry of how he holds his mouth when he’s trying to look functional. And even in a work photo—surrounded by colleagues, probably taken to document the team—he looks haunted. Like he’s doing his best to appear normal while something unbearable churns beneath the performance. The kind of expression you only recognize if you’ve seen someone try to hold themselves together when the internal architecture is compromised.

Specific, inescapable grief.

He’s alive in this photo. Standing upright on a riverbank in 1981, nine years from now, working salvage with people who probably have no idea what he’s carrying. Which means the neurologists were wrong. “Irreversible braindeath” became reversed. The substrate repaired itself. Bobby woke up.

In his timeline, I’m already dead. And he spent years—1973 to at least 1981, maybe longer—living with that. Carrying it. The haunted look in this photo isn’t just grief; it’s the specific weight of believing your sister walked into the woods because you weren’t there to stop her.

But I’m standing here holding proof he survived. Which means December 24 just became obsolete. Not because someone talked me out of it. Because the premise collapsed. Bobby’s awake. The equation rebalanced. I don’t need to walk into those woods anymore.

I keep staring at the photo. Jon waits. Then his hand moves. Gentle. He brushes a stray lock of hair behind my ear, the gesture easy and unbothered, like it’s the most natural thing in the world to stand in a patient room at half past nine and tend to someone’s appearance while they’re holding evidence that rewrites their entire operational logic.

“That photo is from 1981,” Jon says, voice calm and measured. “I was born in 1985. I met Bobby by coincidence in 2006, in the Balearic Islands, off the coast of Spain. Formentera, specifically.”

Thirty-four years from now.

Jon’s hand withdraws from mine—not abruptly, just a natural release, like he needs distance to deliver what comes next.

“I’m a bit of a blabbermouth about the past,” he continues, “and your brother, that by then was a taciturn man with a full head of gray, nursing his drink at the same beach bar, was listening to me talk about the Roman Empire.”

Bobby would be sixty in 2006 if he lived that long. Jon’s describing a version of my brother I’ll never meet—decades older, silent, carrying thirty-four years of whatever happened after this moment.

“You want to know how the story continues?” Jon asks.

I look up from the photo. Meet his eyes. Brown, almond-shaped, watching me without the Kid’s predatory focus. Just waiting to see whether I’ll give him permission to keep talking or whether I’ll shut him down.

If he’s real and telling the truth, then Bobby survived long enough to care in 2006, and had access to someone—something—capable of sending intervention across thirty-four years. If he’s an eidolon, this script is new: time-traveling guardian with photos as evidence, tactile solidity, and a willingness to wait for me to vocalize interest instead of just performing his monologue and vanishing.

“Yeah. Tell me how you met my brother three decades from now.”

Jon smiles like I just gave him exactly the opening he was hoping for.

“Alright, Alicia. Picture this: your brother and I are on that beach in Formentera. He had approached me as I walked away from that beach bar, where I had discussed the Roman Empire with a history professor. Your brother had a strange expression in his grief-lined face. As if he intended to do something absurd, but the problem he had been burdened by for decades required a very specific miracle.”

Jon’s voice shifts—takes on the quality of someone settling into a story he’s told before, one he knows by heart.

“He said in a dry voice, ‘You speak about the Romans as if you knew them personally.’ I admitted it—I don’t care if people find out I’m a time traveler. If they don’t believe it, fuck them. He kept looking at me with these intense eyes. Then he asked, ‘Can you travel to December of 1972?’ I shifted my weight. I recognized the pressure, the urgency. This was a man who needed something to be set right. I said, ‘Yes, no problem. For someone’s sake, I’m guessing. What do you need? What should I do?'”

Jon pauses. Watches my face. Then delivers the last line quietly, like he’s handing me something fragile.

“He said, in this faint voice, as if he could barely form the words—’Save my sister.'”

The timeline makes no ontological sense unless time travel is real or unless this is my unconscious staging the most elaborate wish-fulfillment hallucination I’ve ever produced, complete with thermal signatures and completed letters and a stranger who kisses my forehead and tells me Bobby asked him to save me.

Either way, I just spoke—actually vocalized interest instead of stonewalling—which means I’ve already decided to let this play out instead of dismissing it as theater.

Jon’s expression warms like I just gave him permission to continue.

“Over the next few days, your brother told me about you. A hauntingly-beautiful math genius. Synesthete. Haunted by visions herself. Who abandoned math because it was driving her mad…” He pauses, then adds, almost sheepish, “Well, I’m not entirely sure why you abandoned math. I’m not a math person myself. Anyway, he showed me a photo of yourself, so old and yellowed at that point. He didn’t part ways with it.”

Yellowed. Carried for decades. Bobby holding onto a photograph of me the way someone holds onto evidence of a person who stopped existing. The grief in that action—preservation as mourning ritual—is a thing Bobby would do. Keep the artifact. Never talk about it. Just carry it.

Jon’s voice drops, becomes quieter.

“Your brother made it very clear that you’re a unique being and that your passing from the world was a horrifying tragedy. So, I investigated your circumstances in 1972, found out what patient room you were staying at, and I’ve come here tonight to ask you—please, don’t kill yourself, Alicia Western.”

He steps closer. Both hands come up and settle on my shoulders—firm, grounding pressure, like he’s trying to anchor me to the room while delivering the rest.

“There’s plenty more for you to experience out there. Even happiness.”

Like it’s a fact instead of a sentimental projection. Like Bobby told him I deserved it and Jon believed him.

I need a moment to let the information settle. Not stonewalling—just processing whether this timeline makes ontological sense or whether I’m watching my mind eat itself in a new costume.

Jon stands there, hands on my shoulders, waiting. His breathing is steady.

The silence stretches. I can feel his pulse through his palms—steady, unhurried. Real people with real errands usually can’t tolerate this much silence. They elaborate. They justify. They offer more proof.

“It’s a lot to take in, for sure,” Jon says. “What are you thinking?”

Bobby’s alive. Woke from the coma. Survived being told I killed myself. Lived long enough to care in 2006 and find someone who could reach backward across decades to intervene. Which means the premise—Bobby gone, equation unbalanced, December 24 necessary—just collapsed. I don’t need to finish the letter or tie a red sash or find a tree far enough into the woods.

If this is real, then I owe him acknowledgment—not sentimental gratitude, just recognition that he came here and did what Bobby asked. If this is hallucination, then my unconscious is staging the rescue it wants and I should let it play out instead of stonewalling.

His hands are still on my shoulders. I reach up and place mine on his own shoulders—steady contact, protective gesture returned, acknowledgment that he crossed temporal distance to deliver this and I’m not dismissing it.

He shifts his stance slightly. One hand slides from my shoulder to my waist—the contact more intimate now.

I meet his eyes.

“You just told me my brother lived to sixty. That he survived the coma, the grief, decades of carrying my death, and still cared enough to send you backward to prevent it. If that’s true—if Bobby’s really out there, conscious, alive—then you’ve already done what you came for. I’m not walking into those woods anymore.”

Jon’s face breaks into a smile—genuine warmth, relief flooding his expression. Then he wraps me carefully in his arms, my frame enclosed in his solid, muscular body. The hug is enveloping, protective, like I’m something that needs holding together.

“I’m so glad to hear you say that, Alicia,” he says against my hair. “You don’t have to be alone until Bobby wakes. I can bring stuff from the future, other timelines… As a time traveler, I have damn near infinite access to money. I’ll make sure that you and your brother never have to worry about money ever again.”

He closes his arms tighter. But I didn’t authorize this hug. He initiated and closed his arms and I’m inside the gesture before I decided whether I wanted it. Which is tender, yes, and protective, yes, but also presumptive. I need space to think without being held like a rescued animal.

I step back carefully—gently, because he did just cross thirty-four years to prevent my death and that doesn’t deserve hostility—and put an arm’s length of distance between us.

Jon’s arms release easily. He just watches me, unbothered.

“I appreciate the intervention, Jon. And the financial offer. But I need you to clarify something—when you say I don’t need to be alone until Bobby wakes up, what exactly are you proposing? Are you planning to stay here in 1972, or are you offering periodic visits across the timeline, or is this just about making sure I have access to resources?”

Jon laughs softly, then scratches the back of his neck—a sheepish gesture, almost apologetic.

“Yeah, I haven’t explained much of anything, have I.” He drops his hand. “I don’t rely on technology to travel in time. It’s something I can do—something different in my brain. I’ve never met anyone else like me. I can bring objects with me across the time jumps, but I can’t bring any living thing.”

He pauses, and something shifts in his expression, bleeding through the careful explanation.

“That’s my… personal loneliness that I’ve endured for a long, long time. Nobody has figured out why, but whenever I try to bring anything alive, from people to even bacteria, it just stays behind. So I can’t bring you to other timelines, to the future or whatever. I meant literally accompanying you, filling the loneliness so to speak, until your brother wakes up at the latest on April 27, 1973.”

That’s not just intervention—that’s relationship.

“Alright,” I say. “So you can’t bring me to other timelines, which means ‘traveling together’ means you staying here in 1972 and we spend December through April in the same timeline, conventional sequence. That’s what you mean by ‘accompanying me’—physical presence, not periodic visits. But you still haven’t explained the plan. What are you actually proposing to do about Bobby? Are you just telling me he wakes up in April, or are you intervening somehow to make sure he wakes up? And what does ‘traveling together’ look like day-to-day—are you staying here in Stella Maris, getting a room nearby, or leaving and coming back? I need the operational picture before I agree to anything.”

Jon’s face clears like I just asked exactly the right question.

“I see you need details, and I’m happy to give them.” He takes a deep breath. “I had thought of the following: you leaving Stella Maris as soon as possible. Getting the fuck out of Dodge. Buy you some clothes, as I know you’ve given away all your possessions. Then, we buy a mansion somewhere you prefer. I’ve scouted some, and tested in other timelines that they can be bought at a short notice. If you think of specific places in which to live, just tell me and I’ll scout more.”

A mansion. Not a hotel room, not temporary housing—a property he’s already scouted across timelines to confirm availability. Which means he’s been planning logistics before he even materialized in this room.

“Once we own that base of operations, so to speak,” Jon continues, “we call the goddamn Italians, tell them we’re coming. I pay them for the treatment to Bobby, and add a generous donation for not pulling the plug. Then, we extract Bobby out of there. We fly him in a private flying vehicle from the future back to our mansion. There, we move Bobby into a special bed designed for coma patients. It’s controlled by artificial intelligence. Actually, one named Hypatia, whom my company developed. She’s fantastic, you’ll see. This bed can move the muscles of the comatose patient to avoid atrophy, it can turn them when needed to prevent sores…” He’s warming to the explanation now, more animated. “And it comes with a neurological scanner of sorts that tells us how his brain reacts to stimuli even in his dreams. You see, we haven’t figured out in the future how to wake comatose patients up from their comas, but we’ve proven scientifically that using the kind of treatments that the bed provides, they wake up even sooner, so we may not have to wait until April 1973.”

That’s not companionship—that’s moving Bobby across an ocean and buying me a mansion. Bobby physically present in the same location as me instead of vegetative in Italy while I wait alone in Wisconsin.

The plan has structural coherence—if Jon can bring objects across timelines, a medical bed and aircraft make sense. If he has infinite money via temporal arbitrage, buying a mansion and bribing Italians is trivial. If Bobby’s substrate can recover—the photo proves he does—then better medical support could accelerate that recovery.

But the plan also means I’m making a choice right now. Not just “don’t kill yourself on December 24” but “leave Stella Maris, accept Jon’s material patronage, live in a mansion he buys, cohabit with a comatose Bobby and a time traveler I met twenty minutes ago, and wait for Hypatia the AI to tell us when Bobby’s brain is waking up.”

And he’s standing there, waiting for me to respond to the plan like it’s a done deal. Like of course I’ll say yes because Bobby and mansion and infinite money and accelerated recovery timeline.

But I need to think about what saying yes actually means. I’d be leaving the only institution I chose voluntarily. Entrusting Bobby’s physical body to technology I haven’t verified. Cohabiting with Jon for an indefinite period—December to April minimum, possibly longer if the bed accelerates things or doesn’t. Accepting financial dependence on someone I literally just met who claims to be from 2006 and says my sixty-year-old brother sent him backward to save me.

If he’s real, that’s rescue. Bobby’s alive and I owe him the chance to prove the bed works. If he’s an eidolon, this is my unconscious staging the most elaborate wish-fulfillment scenario it’s ever produced—Bobby conscious, infinite resources, companionship, medical intervention, escape from Stella Maris—and saying yes means I’m letting the hallucination dictate my material decisions. Which is how you end up sectioned permanently.

But the photo was real. Thermal ink, grain, Bobby’s face in ’81. The letter was real—yellowed paper, my handwriting, thoughts I recognize. His body is real—heartbeat, musk, solidity. So either he’s real, or my visitors have escalated to full sensory simulation and I can’t trust perception anymore. Which means I’m already lost.

If I can’t trust perception, then it doesn’t matter whether I say yes or no—reality is contested either way. But if he’s real, and I say no, then Bobby wakes up in Italy in April and I’m still here in Stella Maris having refused the intervention. December 24 is still on the table because the equation hasn’t changed, just the timeline. Whereas if I say yes, Bobby’s here. Jon’s here. The bed is here. And I’m not alone while waiting for Bobby to wake.

That’s the variable that actually matters. Not the mansion or the money or even the medical tech, but that I wouldn’t be alone. I’ve been alone since I fled Italy. Alone in the patient room. Alone with the visitors. Alone with the letter and the woods and December 24. Jon’s offering to end that. Not with platitudes or therapy or medication, but with physical presence and operational logistics and Bobby in the same house. If he can actually deliver that, then yes is the only answer that makes sense.

I need to confirm he understands what he’s offering—that this isn’t just “prevent suicide and leave,” it’s “stay until Bobby wakes and possibly longer, cohabit with a woman you just met who has visitors and doesn’t do community and will test whether you’re real by seeing if you sustain tenderness or start trying to manage her.”

“I’ll leave with you,” I say. “We’ll set up the mansion, extract Bobby, try the bed. If Hypatia can actually monitor his neural activity and the bed prevents atrophy, that’s better than leaving him vegetative in Italy while I wait here.”

Relief floods through Jon’s face.

“But I need you to clarify something before I agree to the whole operational picture,” I continue. “What do you actually want in return for all of this? You’re offering infinite money, a mansion, future-tech medical equipment, and your continuous presence for months. Nobody does that without expecting something. So what is it? Companionship? Gratitude? Proof that the mission succeeded? Or something else you haven’t named yet? And when you say ‘traveling together,’ do you mean you’re staying the entire time—December through whenever Bobby wakes—or are you setting everything up and then leaving, or checking in periodically? I need to know what kind of relationship you’re proposing before I let you restructure my entire material reality.”

Jon meets my eyes. Something shifts in his expression—the careful explanation dropping away. What’s left is plainer.

“Are you subtly asking me if I want to fuck you, Alicia? Is that the concern? Any heterosexual man would want to be intimate with you. That doesn’t exclude me. But you are in an extremely vulnerable emotional situation. I wouldn’t think of even going along those lines until you are settled, feel better, and genuinely feel something in terms of reciprocity.”

He’s acknowledging the power differential. Naming it instead of pretending it doesn’t exist.

“I also get lonely, Alicia,” he says, quieter now, “and most human beings across the vast spans of time are unbearably, painfully boring. I want to spend time with someone special. Travel together, watch movies, have interesting conversations. Buying you a mansion and getting Bobby out of Italy isn’t much of an effort when you have my kind of money.”

That’s honest. Not manipulation masked as rescue. Just stating the operational picture clearly—intervention plus optional intimacy, my timeline, my choice. The real ask is companionship—time with someone special, movies, conversation, mutual loneliness addressed.

The plan makes sense. Leave Stella Maris, set up infrastructure, extract Bobby, cohabit until Bobby wakes. Companionship optional but available if I want it. Intimacy deferred until I initiate. I don’t need to be alone while waiting for Bobby to wake up if Jon’s offering to stay and the offer is genuine.

“I accept. We’ll leave Stella Maris, set up the mansion, extract Bobby, install him in Hypatia’s bed. You can stay if you want—companionship, movies, whatever—but I’m not promising anything beyond cohabitation until I see whether you’re real across ordinary time. And if at any point this starts feeling like management instead of companionship, I’m walking. Understood?”

I close the distance between us. Not invasively. Just reducing the conversational space I created earlier. He doesn’t retreat. Just stands there as I approach. At this range I can feel the heat coming off his chest again. See the rise and fall of his breath.

He smiles at me—warm, unbothered.

“That’s great, Alicia. Then it’s on your terms when you want to leave Stella Maris. I know you came voluntarily, but I guess you want to say goodbye to people here. Whenever you’re ready, you’ll just have to call me on the transmitter, tell me to come get you, and I’ll show up with a car, ask the receptionist whether Alicia Western is here. I’ll play the part of someone from your past who came to take you away from this… well, sad place. About intimacy, you don’t need to promise anything nor even think about it. Just focus on returning back to life. But regarding what you said about ‘if at any point this starts feeling like management instead of companionship, I’m walking’… I’m not sure I understand. What would management look like to you?”

His hand comes up. Fingers brush against my cheek—soft, deliberate, the gesture tender but also presumptive. Like he’s allowed to touch my face while asking me to define boundaries. That’s proximity I initiated by moving close after accepting the plan provisionally, yes—but it’s also proximity that’s starting to feel like it’s assuming the relationship is already defined when we’re still clarifying what the relationship actually is.

I need space. His heat, his smell, his hand on my face—it’s all too close to think clearly. Better to step back now. Create conversational distance again. Signal that I’m considering the offer seriously but I need room to articulate what I actually need without his touch as variable. If he respects the boundary adjustment, that’s a tell that he meant what he said about “on your terms.” If he closes distance again immediately or looks hurt, that’s a different tell—means he needs proximity to feel secure, which would be its own kind of dependence I’d need to account for.

I step back. His hand falls away from my cheek.

“Management looks like you deciding what’s good for me and then engineering circumstances so I arrive at that conclusion on my own while believing it was my choice,” I say. “Companionship looks like you staying because I asked, leaving when I need solitude, and not treating my decisions—including bad ones—as problems you’re obligated to solve. If you’re here to prevent suicide as a mission parameter, that’s management. If you’re here because you want to spend time with me and suicide prevention is a consequence of that presence, that’s different. So which is it?”

Jon rubs his chin, thoughtful.

“I see what you mean. First of all, I must clarify, in case you haven’t noticed, that I’m not remotely as intelligent as you are. I can time-travel and all, but it’s not like that made me a genius. So you’ll have to be a little patient with my thought processes. Alright, when I figure out a plan about anything involving your life, I’ll lay it out, ask whether it feels right for you. And if at any moment you want me to scram, just say so and I’ll disappear. But if suddenly you decide that you want to kill yourself despite your brother Bobby waking up eventually, despite having your own mansion and financial help… I mean, I’ll have to restrain you and prevent you from killing yourself just on principle. Do you think that would be unreasonable?”

That’s honest enough to be useful. But it also means if I accept this arrangement, I’m accepting a jailer who believes he’s protecting me from myself. Maybe that’s reasonable—maybe suicide prevention is the one non-negotiable boundary that doesn’t constitute management—but I need to think about whether I can live inside that constraint for four months without feeling like I’m back in institutional custody with better amenities.

“Which means this isn’t companionship without conditions—it’s rescue with override authority. That’s management, Jon. You’re offering me a mansion and infinite resources and Bobby’s extraction, but the price is accepting that my autonomy is conditional and you retain veto power if I decide the universe is still structured for destruction and suicide becomes necessary again despite the intervention. So let’s be clear—are you offering companionship where I set the terms, or are you offering supervised relief where you intervene if my decisions conflict with your mission to keep me alive? Because those are different relationships and I need to know which one I’m actually accepting before I let you restructure my entire material reality around your apparatus.”

Jon shakes his head slightly.

“I’m sorry, Alicia, but I don’t accept your dichotomy. If I get to know you to the extent that I like you as a person, as a friend even… if I happened to find out you intend to kill yourself, would me trying to stop you be ‘supervision,’ or just the pure natural reaction to someone you care about trying to remove themselves, even though their decision could have been made under a temporary mental disruption?”

The careful negotiation drops away from Jon’s expression.

“I guess I’ll make it clear,” he adds. “I intend to keep you alive under all circumstances, Alicia. And I wish to offer you a better life than your meager, depressing current one, until your brother Bobby joins your side. When your brain makes up its mind and convinces you that extinction is the best course of action… well, it was wrong this time, wasn’t it? Your brother eventually woke up, and your death was a horrible tragedy. My job is to prevent that from happening.”

Maybe that’s what I need. Someone who won’t leave when my brain tells me to die. Someone who’ll hold the line when I can’t argue with myself anymore. The weight behind my ribs shifts—not gone, but different.

The silence stretches between us. This is rescue with veto authority, companionship is optional, and he’s not negotiating the suicide-prevention parameter.

Jon watches my face, then sighs.

“This has been a lot to take in, hasn’t it?” His voice softens. “It’s nearly midnight. You must be exhausted, and you have a lot to think about. Would you prefer for me to leave for tonight so you can sleep? I can come by tomorrow morning, bring you breakfast.”

I don’t answer. Just stand there, letting the silence sit.

He nods, then smiles at me.

“Alright, I’ll let you be. Good night, Alicia. I hope that before you fall asleep you remember that soon enough you’ll be in your own place, a house big enough that nobody will bother you, and with Bobby recovering in one of the rooms. I hope that when you wake up, things feel lighter for you. See you in the morning.”

Jon vanishes from the room. Disappears instantly—one moment standing there, the next just gone. The air where he stood settles back into stillness.

I’m alone again. The fluorescent hum fills the silence.

I am exhausted. Two days of holding the line against institutional concern, writing the letter, the Kid’s intermittent visits, Jon’s arrival with the photo and timeline and sovereignty interrogation—it’s been sustained cognitive load and I can feel my thinking starting to fray at the edges.

Better to lie down, let the mattress take the weight, see if sleep arrives or if my mind just continues processing the question: do I believe the photo is real. Do I believe Bobby woke up. Do I believe the universe allowed one structural exception to its design principle that everything created gets destroyed.

Custody of the Rot (Short Story)

The mansion’s front door fights back, then the servant yanks it wider and nods. I’m past him, boots on gravel, cutting for the service yard.

The yard’s a wedge of hard-used ground trapped between the east wing and the boundary fence—packed gravel, deep wagon ruts, built to take mud and keep moving. Our cart sits in the thick of it, and the crew’s gathered there: Pitch in his blast bib, Saffi in her dive jacket, Kestrel’s tall frame, and Hobb Rusk standing off to the side in that kiln-black Ash-Seal coat.

Past the fence, the canal runs parallel and close, separated by a narrow strip of towpath. The water’s wrong: tar-black, sluggish, filmed with a dull sheen that catches lamplight in greasy swirls. The smell reaches us in waves—sour rot with metal underneath, like wet iron left in a bucket too long.

I stop at a distance, far enough to address my crew as a group. I meet their eyes one by one: Pitch, Saffi, Kestrel.

Then I sigh. Lower my head.

My tail starts thumping against the gravel—slow, rhythmic. Old habit. I raise my gaze again, and something hardens in me.

“Alright, crew. Client’s one Lady Eira Quenreach. I had only heard of her. Now I wish it had remained that way. Had you followed me inside that trap room, there would have been far more shouting. Short version—we’re screwed. Long version—Lady was renovating her underground galleries when they dislodged an ancient artifact in a silted culvert. Messed with the seal or the ward or whatever. It started leaking that rot that has blackened the waters and made them stink something awful.”

I jerk my chin toward the canal.

“As you can see, it’s spreading far out of the estate. They reckon in two days the rot’ll be in range of the city inspectors. Of course Quenreach wants us to get rid of the artifact before someone sniffs her way. And the artifact won’t stop spewing that black shit, which means it’ll eventually ruin Brinewick’s whole canal network unless we stop it. Somehow that ain’t the worst of it.”

The silence stretches. Morning fog drifts between us, and the canal churns wrong behind the fence—thick, sluggish, a sound like something rotting from the inside out.

Kestrel laughs. Sharp. Involuntary. The sound cuts through the fog and dies fast.

I rub the fur of my brow, then meet their eyes again.

“The construction workers who approached the artifact reported pressure headaches. Fell into trance states. Got mind-wormed—intrusive compulsions toward moving water. Two workers drowned. Afterwards, all the workers quit. Some took at least a couple of the grate keys with them. A fuck-you on their way out, maybe.”

I shake my head.

“A mind-controller ancient artifact that risks rotting the whole canal network’s water. Which of course includes Brinewick’s drinking supplies. Lady Quenreach should have kissed our boots for coming down here to fix this quick.”

My jaw tightens.

“Instead, she handed me a contract that says the moment we touch that artifact, custody falls on us. Including responsibility for further contamination and deaths. And if the inspectors trace the mess back to the source and want to squeeze money out of anyone responsible, we’re supposed to pay for the protected parties’ losses—which would include the whole of Brinewick, as if we shat the ancient turd ourselves. Of course, by ‘we’ I mean me and our bossman back at headquarters. Nothing legal’s going to barrel down your way.”

I draw a breath. Let it out.

“Guess I’ve gotten through all the setup. This is the part where I tell each of you—Saffi, Pitch, Kestrel—that if you want to walk, you walk. Truth is, though, I don’t think this can be done without any of you.”

Kestrel laughs again—another sharp burst, then another, each one cutting out fast like her throat’s choking them off. Her eyes dart from me to Pitch to Saffi to the canal and back, that worried look deepening across her muzzle while her mouth keeps trying to laugh.

I turn my hands palm-up toward the sky, then drop them and force myself to meet each of their eyes one by one.

“Yeah, it was a lot to take in for me too. Let’s hear it, folks. What do you decide? I promise to shield you from any legal consequences—I’m the only one who signed, and if push comes to shove, I’ll claim I worked alone—but we’re risking more than legal here. Whoever’s staying, we gotta know soon, because we must move straight to logistics. Every minute counts.”

Pitch stands there in his blast bib, expression unreadable. Saffi’s golden eyes are hooded, slits tracking between me and the others.

Kestrel turns her head toward them both, then back to me. A broad smile spreads across her muzzle. She laughs.

“Yeah, I’m in. Not walking on this one, Jorren. You need muscle for hauling, pinning, or dragging someone out of a trance state before they drown themselves? That’s what I do.”

Another involuntary laugh bursts out of her.

“Besides, if that rot hits the drinking water and people start dying, that’s on all of us if we could’ve stopped it and didn’t. So count me in. Let’s hear the logistics.”

A sigh of relief escapes me before I can stop it.

“Don’t know how glad I am to have you by my side in this rotten mess, Kestrel.”

I turn my gaze to Pitch and Saffi.

“We got at least two old ironwork grates to crack open because their keys have flown. I’m talking thirty feet from access point to the half-collapsed culvert where the artifact is entombed, so we’ll need expert handling of bolt cutters or handsaws while mind-worms push into our brains. That’s where you’d come in, Pitch. And Saffi, intrusive compulsions toward diving into rotted flows means we need a line tender. The best in the business. The rope-meister. Not guilting you—just stating facts. We pull that artifact out of the water or soon enough Brinewick’s going to be drinking rot.”

Pitch meets my eyes directly. His voice comes out flat and certain.

“I’m in. Ironwork cracked and grates breached while mind-worms push into our heads? That’s demolition work under pressure, and that’s what I do. The rot’s real, the timeline’s real, and if we don’t stop it Brinewick’s drinking supply goes septic. So fuck the paperwork. I’ll handle the breaches. You’ve got your demolition specialist.”

Saffi’s tail curls once, then goes still. She speaks.

“You need a line tender who can read wrongness through rope before it becomes visible. Someone who won’t freeze when mind-worms start pushing compulsions. The artifact’s already killed two people. So yeah. I’ll handle the line work. You’ve got your rope-meister.”

The relief hits hard.

I catch movement in my periphery—Hobb Rusk stepping closer, circling around the crew’s loose cluster to position himself near our group. Still in that meticulous Ash-Seal coat, still silent, but the proximity signals engagement. Not commitment, though.

I thump my tail against the gravel once, decisively. The sound cuts through the fog and settles something in me. My face shifts—the worry-frown giving way to the harder focus I get when I’m mapping logistics.

“About thirty feet from access point to flooded section that contains our half-collapsed silted culvert and the buried artifact. Can’t wade straight to it—at least two grates we don’t have keys for. We get through the grates first. Then we dig the artifact out, slow and careful. Client believes it’s currently sealed, so we can’t risk cracking that with a quick extraction.”

I crouch down, fingers tracing an absent map in the gravel while I think it through.

“The sealed version of the artifact is already rotting the canal network and killing people, so we don’t want to know what the exposed version can do.”

The line draws itself in my head: access point to first grate to second grate to artifact location. Thirty feet of blind work underground.

“Zero visibility in those underground tunnels. Lanterns are a must.” I turn my head toward the cart. “We brought a couple. Alright, so we illuminate our steps from the access point to the grates. Imagine we’re cutting through the locked grates when mind-fuckery worms its way into our brains, telling us to dive into the canal waters. Need to be clipped to a rope, with Saffi as the anchor on the back. Anyone strays, sharp pull. These mind-compulsions don’t sound like the kind of worm you can squash easily, because construction workers just walked into a drowning—any of us starts looking loopy and tries to unclip themselves from the line, we need strength to restrain them. That’s where you’ll come in, Kestrel.”

Pitch heads toward the dredgers’ cart, his stocky frame cutting through the fog. He reaches for the bolt cutters, testing their weight and grip with practiced hands.

“I’ll take point on the grate breaches. Bolt cutters for primary cuts, hacksaw for backup if the ironwork’s thicker than expected.”

Pitch grabs the bolt cutters fully, the metal catching what little light pushes through the dawn.

“Thirty-year-old grates, no keys, zero visibility, mind-worms pushing drowning compulsions—yeah, I can work with that. Just need to know: are we cutting clean to preserve the infrastructure, or are we cracking them fast and dirty to hit the timeline? Because those are different approaches, and I need to know which one we’re buying before I start planning the cuts.”

I straighten up from the crouch, and that’s when I notice the newt-folk liaison, Hobb Rusk, standing to my side. Close—touching distance. That kiln-black coat, the ash-gray collar standing crisp despite the fog. Those large round eyes fixed on me, waiting. He’s positioned himself to hear my answer to Pitch, but he ain’t dressed for tunnels and he sure as hell ain’t volunteering to come down with us.

I meet his eyes briefly.

“Thank you for paying attention to our logistics, Master Rusk, even though I won’t even bother asking if you’re coming down to contain the artifact at the extraction point. You ain’t even dressed for it. But all we need is your magic box and a thorough destruction of the ancient terror so we can all cart back to our lives.”

I turn to face our sapper directly.

“Pitch, don’t know where you got that thing about grates being thirty years old. The way the Lady and her right-hand man sounded, the infrastructure down there is ‘ancestors-old.’ Maybe a couple hundreds of years old. Ironwork that age may be easier to saw through. Regarding infrastructure, this ain’t a ‘blow shit up’ situation, I’m afraid to disappoint. Silted culvert containing the entombed artifact is already half-collapsed—a blast may send down slabs of stone onto the artifact’s seal, then all hell’s broke loose. Lady Quenreach agrees to ruining them locked grates, just not to the point of collapsing the tunnels and fucking us all.”

Pitch moves back toward the cart and grabs the hacksaw, testing the blade tension with his thumb. His voice comes out measured.

“Ancestors-old ironwork. Right. That’s brittle, oxidized differently than modern stock—fails at different stress points. Makes the cuts trickier but maybe faster if I read the weaknesses right.”

He slides the hacksaw into his belt loop alongside the bolt cutters.

“Got primary and backup. No explosives, no structural collapse risk. Just precise cuts through old iron while mind-worms crawl into our skulls.”

A burst of wild laughter from Kestrel punctuates Pitch’s resolution. She stays quiet otherwise, that worried look still carved deep across her muzzle even as her mouth twitches toward another laugh.

Saffi moves to the cart and takes one of the hooded oil lanterns, the motion efficient and practiced.

“Alright,” I say, “both phases seem separated to me—first, clear our path to the flooded section where the artifact waits buried under two feet of contaminated water. Once we’re done with that, we head back up, leave the bolt cutters and hacksaws and whatnot, then pick up the planks and trenching shovels and block-and-tackle for the by-the-book extraction. We will enter with Pitch on point, the four of us clipped, rope-meister on the back as anchor. Let’s think perils—bad water that’s also a lure. One of us may pause, stare at the flow, step in, stop fighting to get out. Being clipped should help.”

I approach the cart to browse through the remaining tools. My hand scratches at my chin.

“Might wanna bring the throw line… but we’d have to hope the person who walked into the water wants to catch it. Rest of the risks come when we reach the silted culvert—I’m talking zero visibility sludge, confined space hazards. Two feet of water over uneven rubble is ankle-breaking terrain. Will need planks for that. And of course: crack the seal, and everyone loses.”

Saffi moves to the cart and takes a coil of long rope, looping it over her shoulder.

“Logistics of the first extraction phase look fine,” I say. “Now, worst case scenarios—imagine Saffi’s tending to the line when she suddenly decides the rotted waters look sweet enough for a dive, and we find our diver underwater in waters she shouldn’t dive in. Or what if the first one to look loopy is our gentle giant Kestrel, but nobody’s strong enough to restrain her? What if Pitch’s cutting through a grate only for his hands to drop the tools, then for him to jump pantless and ass-first into that liquid darkness? Any ideas?”

Kestrel lets out a succession of laughs that manage to sound both compulsive and nervous.

“C’mon, folks,” I say. “I’m thinking our most reasonable contingency plan is ‘don’t get mind-wormed.’ Anyone clever enough to come up with something better to do once someone’s eyes go blank?”

Pitch moves toward the cart again, reaching for one of the remaining hooded oil lanterns.

“Need light to read the ironwork properly. Can’t assess cuts or oxidation patterns in the dark.”

He takes the lantern, metal catching dull morning light through the fog.

I rub the fur of my forehead, working through the problem.

“Let me think about this… Two construction workers drowned. Plenty reported the mental compulsions but didn’t jump into the water. We need a taste of how those mind-worms actually feel like. A probe of sorts. Once we go down there—clipped of course—for the first phase, the moment one of us gets mind-wormed and starts hearing words in their head that don’t belong to them, we hurry them back up to the surface, or at least out of the access point. See how long it takes for the mind-worm to go away. Which we know it does because the affected workers all fled.”

“Alright, worst-case scenarios,” Kestrel says. “Here’s what I’m thinking—we can’t stop the mind-worm from hitting, but we can make it harder to act on. First: multiple clips on the line. Not just one carabiner—two, maybe three per person. That way if someone’s brain tells them to unhook and dive, they’ve got to fumble through extra metal while we’re yanking them back. Buys us seconds, maybe more.”

She shifts her weight, that worried look still carved deep across her muzzle even as another involuntary laugh bursts out.

“Second: watchers. We pair up—one person works, one person watches. Pitch cuts the grate, I watch his eyes. Saffi tends line, Jorren watches her. The moment someone goes blank-eyed or starts staring at the water too long, the watcher yells and we haul them out of the access point, back to the surface, see how long it takes for the compulsion to fade. Third, and this is the uncomfortable part—if the worm hits me and I decide I want that water, rope tension and crew strength might not be enough to stop me. So we need a fallback: Saffi’s line-work has to be strong enough to drag dead weight, and the rest of you need to be ready to pile on if I start moving toward the canal. Same goes for anyone else who gets wormed hard. We can’t prevent it, Jorren. But we can plan for the aftermath. Make it harder to drown ourselves even when our brains are telling us it’s the right call. Not a great plan. But it’s the only one I’ve got that’s honest about the risk.”

“Brilliant, Kestrel. Multiple clips. Pair up. I think that’s as good as it’s going to get for our first extraction phase.”

I turn my head to look up at the Ash-Seal liaison. Hobb Rusk’s standing there in that meticulous kiln-black coat, large round eyes fixed somewhere between me and the crew. He’s been listening this whole time—close enough to hear every word of our contingency planning, silent enough that I almost forgot he was there.

“Master Rusk, what exactly do you need from us? We’ve worked with other Ash-Sealers in the past but not in these fucked-up circumstances. What constraints are you relying on so you can contain the artifact in your box and pulverize it, or whatever the hell you tight-lipped fuckers do?”

Hobb’s eyes shift to meet mine directly. There’s a pause, like he’s organizing his answer into the specific order he wants. His hands stay at his sides, webbed fingers motionless. Then he speaks.

“I need the artifact intact and sealed when you hand it to me. If the seal’s cracked—if you drop it, if stone slabs crush it during excavation, if someone gets mind-wormed and drags it through contaminated water—the containment process changes completely. A sealed artifact goes into the box with standard ward protocols and salt geometry calibration. An actively leaking artifact requires layered suppression, extended calibration time, and significantly higher risk of containment failure. So your extraction needs to be precise enough that what you bring me is still structurally intact, even if it’s covered in sludge. Beyond that, I need workspace—clean ground, adequate humidity for the box’s adhesion wards, and enough light to verify seal integrity before I start the containment sequence. If you can’t provide that at the extraction site, we bring the artifact back here to the service yard before I touch it. And timeline: sealed artifact, maybe an hour for full containment. Cracked artifact, could be three to six hours depending on how bad the leak is, and I can’t guarantee success if the damage is severe enough.”

His lipless mouth compresses into a thin line.

“So the short version is this—bring me what you promised Lady Quenreach you’d extract, don’t fuck up the seal during the dig, and give me the workspace I need to do my job properly. Do that, and we’re fine. Crack it and hand me a disaster, and the timeline you’re working with collapses completely.”

I nod at Hobb Rusk, processing his parameters.

“Got it—clean ground, adequate humidity, enough light. Perfect arguments to stay topside instead of crawling through contaminated tunnels with us. Alright, we’ll bring the ancient, sludgy turd straight to your hands, and hope we don’t ruin the package along the way.”

I look around at the opulent estate grounds—manicured gardens, precisely trimmed hedges, wide gravel paths that probably cost more than my year’s wages.

“As for providing you with a good enough workspace…” I gesture at the space around us. “If the open air won’t do, we can talk to the steward. Man’s an amphibian too—maybe you two will reminisce about your family tree as you save the day.”

My tail thumps against the gravel twice. I turn to face my crew. Pitch stands there in his blast bib, bolt cutters and hacksaw collected, lantern in hand. His expression’s unreadable—that demolition-specialist look that doesn’t give away whether he’s got questions or he’s just waiting for me to finish talking. Saffi’s got her rope coiled over one shoulder and her lantern ready, golden eyes tracking between me and the others with that hooded, calculating look she gets when she’s reading group dynamics.

“Folks,” I say, “unless you’ve got some last-minute objections, let’s gear up. Nobody’s dying today. Otherwise I’ll be forced to drag you out of whatever afterlife you believe in, and that’d ruin my afternoon.”

THE END

Blackwater Contract (Short Story)

A servant closes the door from outside without so much as a nod. Through the narrowing gap I catch a last glimpse of the foggy canal landing, the estate fence lost somewhere in the mist, before the latch clicks.

Inside, the vestibule’s churning with movement. Servants in uniform—animal-folk and humans both—scrubbing floors, rushing through with laundry. Frantic enough that something went wrong recently.

I stand on the mat by the threshold, waiting for someone to receive me. They flow past like I’m furniture.

“Hey,” I call out. “I’m with the dredgers. I was told to meet the employer here.”

Not a glance. A servant with a bucket doesn’t even break stride.

I thump my tail on the pristine tiles.

“Folks,” I say, keeping level. “Your canal water’s gone bad. That Lady of yours should come meet me as soon as possible.”

That breaks through. A human woman glances my way, then hurries toward the double doors at the far end of the hall. She swings one open and disappears inside.

Moments later she’s back out, and a toad-folk man in a tar-black waxed oversmock follows her into the hall. He makes straight for me.

I nod as he reaches me.

“I’m guessing you ain’t the Lady. I’m Jorren Weir, dredgers’ crew leader.” I hook my thumb back toward the estate grounds. “I saw you have a serious problem with your canal waters. Flow’s tar-black, rotten-looking, and it stinks something awful. This ain’t a simple spill situation, given you hired us dredgers.”

“You’ve got the right read, Weir. It’s not a spill—it’s sealed work gone wrong, and the Lady’s waiting to brief you herself.” He gestures with one padded hand toward an interior doorway, already turning. “This way. She’ll explain the contract terms and the site conditions. I’ll be handling your crew’s logistics once you’ve seen what we’re dealing with.”

He’s moving before he finishes speaking. I follow him through a short corridor and into a sitting room.

Upholstered chairs in pale colors, low table stacked with papers, muted lighting. A white-furred ermine-folk woman sits in one of the chairs, dressed in layers of ivory and pearl-gray, document in her gloved hands.

The toad-folk man moves to the second chair and settles into it, easy and practiced, angling so he’s facing both the lady and the empty third seat.

“Mr. Weir, this is Lady Eira Quenreach.” He nods toward the ermine-folk woman. “My Lady, Jorren Weir, crew leader.”

He gestures with one padded hand toward the third chair.

“The contract’s ready for your review, Weir, but the Lady will want to walk you through the site conditions first. What you saw from the canal edge is the surface problem—the sealed work’s below, and it’s nastier than a simple extraction.”

“Guess I’m sitting down.”

The chair’s more comfortable than I’m used to. Once I’m squared away, I address them both.

“Our boss was awfully cagey about this job. Even requested an Ash-Seal liaison to handle artifact destruction on-site.” I gesture toward the window, the canal beyond. “The rot on the waters tells me this is some shitty business. Never seen a cursed item taint our waters like that. Straight talk—what are we pulling up?”

Lady Quenreach extends the contract toward me—smooth, deliberate motion, held at an angle that reads as courteous rather than urgent. Her voice stays soft, measured.

“Mr. Weir. I appreciate your directness.”

The document passes from her gloved fingers to mine. Heavy.

“What you’re being asked to extract is a sealed artifact—very old, pre-estate construction, entombed in a silted culvert. We don’t know what it is.” She pauses, letting that settle. “What we do know is that it’s been leaching corruption into the canal water since it was dislodged during excavation work two days ago.”

I flip the contract open, scanning the first page while she talks.

“The workers who handled it reported pressure headaches, intrusive compulsions toward moving water, and trance states. Two drowned. The rest quit.”

My eyes flick up from the page.

“The site is partially flooded,” she continues, gray eyes level, tone factual. “The access routes are tight, and some of the grate keys are missing. You’ll need people who can work in bad water without losing focus, and you’ll need your Ash-Seal liaison on-site for destruction. That document establishes that you’re claiming the artifact under salvage and quarantine protocol. What it also establishes is that the artifact’s origin point is documented as somewhere in the broader canal network—not specifically here.” Her voice remains calm, almost gentle. “If inspectors trace the taint, your records will reflect that. The terms are there. Read them, and then we’ll discuss site access and compensation.”

I scratch the fur on my chin. Two drowned. A lure in the water. That’s new. Something this nasty needs to be dragged away from our canal waters as soon as possible.

First, though, I’ll read through this legal text of hers, see what fine print they’ve included.

“There’s always some, right?” I say, settling the contract flat across my lap.

The room goes quiet. I read through the standard clauses—salvage rights, quarantine authority, non-disclosure about site origin. All expected. Then I hit the section that makes my jaw tighten.

I lower the contract carefully to my lap, keeping my gaze on the text for a moment before I raise my eyes to both of them. I feel the frown pulling at my muzzle.

“Quite the one-sided contract, ain’t it?” I say, calm.

Lady Quenreach’s expression doesn’t shift. The toad-folk man stays still.

“I understand a legal document handing us off a cursed item,” I continue, “and requiring us not to tell that we found it in a noble’s estate. Standard stuff—nobody wants the stink to trace back to them, and most of the cursed shit’s been there for gods know how long, so the landowners aren’t at fault.”

I lift the contract, angling it so they can see I’m reading straight from the page.

“But what’s this crap?” I read aloud: “‘The moment a dredger touches the artifact, custody, disposal authority, and responsibility shift to the dredgers, including responsibility for contamination, downstream spread, injuries/deaths, and any public hazard that follows.’ Fuck, and this part—’If inspectors investigate, if fines happen, if scandal erupts—the dredgers must defend and pay for the protected parties’ losses.'”

I lower the contract again, meeting their eyes.

“So, it ain’t enough that we’re here to risk our necks in your canal, we’re also meant to eat the shit your artifact is already spewing?”

The silence stretches. Lady Quenreach’s face stays calm, her hands motionless in her lap. She lets my objection sit there in the air for a measured breath before she responds.

“You’re right, Mr. Weir. It is one-sided.” Her voice stays soft, but there’s something underneath it now. Thread of steel. “Because the artifact is already spewing, as you said. The contamination isn’t waiting for signatures—it’s spreading through the canal network right now, whether you take this contract or leave it. What this document does is formalize what’s already true: the moment you extract it, you’re the ones handling a quarantine-class object. That’s not me imposing liability—that’s waterways code. Cursed artifacts don’t stay clean just because the paperwork’s polite. If inspectors trace the taint and you’re standing there with no contract, no documented salvage claim, and no legal authority to have moved it—what does that look like? It looks like dredgers who freelanced a removal without protocol and made the problem worse. This contract is what makes your work legitimate. It establishes that you claimed it under salvage and quarantine authority, that you’re coordinating with an Ash-Seal liaison for proper destruction, and that you handled it by the book. The terms are harsh because the artifact is harsh. But they’re also what keeps you from being the ones blamed for amateur handling.”

Her voice softens just slightly.

“I need it gone, you need the pay and the proof your crew can do this kind of work, and the canal network needs it out of the water before the rot reaches Brinewick’s drinking supplies. The terms don’t change. But you can sign knowing that walking away doesn’t make the liability disappear—it just leaves it unassigned, and unassigned liability has a way of landing on whoever was closest when the disaster got worse.”

I shift in the chair, feeling the upholstery creak under me. I keep my voice level—calm, but firm enough that they hear I’m not bending just because the setting’s nice.

“Lady Quenreach, I respect your position as a noble of the realm, but let me tell you—I know the waterways code better than the bastards who wrote it. You wanna test me on that? Section twelve, subsection four. Salvage claim transfers on recovery, not on your say-so. Get it straight—we pull your trash out of the water. That don’t make us trash. Not river scum picking through garbage. We touch the occult shit so you don’t have to. Just because we’re built for water don’t mean we’re built to die in it for your convenience.”

The toad-folk man stays perfectly still in his chair. Lady Quenreach’s expression doesn’t shift.

“Thing is,” I continue, “we both know you can’t find another crew in time to risk their necks in that canal. Not when the rot’s spreading bad enough it’ll ruin the water system of our great city in a couple of days. That’ll affect far worse than your reputation, milady. So we can’t in good conscience leave your canal clogged with whatever ancient turd’s lodged down there.”

Silence settles over the room—the deliberate kind, where someone’s letting your words breathe before they respond. Lady Quenreach’s hands stay folded in her lap, her gray eyes steady on mine.

Then she speaks. Measured, almost thoughtful.

“You’re absolutely right, Mr. Weir. You’re not river scum. You’re professionals. That’s exactly why I called you. And you’re right that I can’t find another crew—not one that can handle contaminated salvage on this timeline, not one with an Ash-Seal liaison already coordinated, and not one whose boss understands that quarantine-class artifacts don’t wait for polite negotiation. But let’s be clear about what’s actually happening here. That artifact is already spewing its poison into the canal network. Whether you sign this contract or walk out that door, the taint is spreading. If it reaches Brinewick’s water supply—and it will, if no one extracts it—inspectors will come. They will trace it upstream. They will demand to know who knew, who delayed, and who refused to act.”

She leans forward slightly.

“If you walk away, they will find out professional dredgers were offered legitimate salvage work under quarantine protocol, were told about the contamination risk, and even though they had an Ash-Seal liaison ready to coordinate destruction, they refused. And when the disaster gets worse, when people start asking why no one acted, your boss’s reputation suffers. Not because you did the work badly. Because you didn’t do it at all.”

I tsk.

“Tough one, aren’t you?” I lean back in the chair. “I’ll bring my crew down there and get rid of the artifact. This ain’t about your fancy reputation or mine any longer—it’s about my little one not needing to drink rotten water thanks to whatever cursed piece of occult crap some ancient imbecile buried in your land.”

I pull my pencil from the vest pocket. Chewed at one end, but the graphite’s still good. My eyes catch the quill sitting on the coffee table between us—proper writing instrument, the noble kind.

I hold up my pencil.

“Is a dredger’s pencil good enough to sign, or do I need to use your quill as well?”

“Your pencil is perfectly acceptable, Mr. Weir. The contract’s binding either way. Sign wherever you’re most comfortable—margin, footer, wherever your crew protocol requires. If you want witness marks, Mr. Siltwell can countersign as landowner’s agent.”

Her gray eyes stay steady on mine.

“Once it’s signed, we’ll walk through site access, key inventories, and liaison coordination. The faster your crew can begin extraction, the better for everyone.”

I rest the contract on my thigh and sign using the pencil. When I straighten, my gaze sweeps from Lady Quenreach to the toad-folk man—Siltwell. The frown’s still pulling at my muzzle.

“Done,” I say. “All the dredgers’ crew responsibility now.”

Siltwell leans forward just enough that the room’s weight shifts with him. His tone stays practical.

“Good. Now we move to site access and coordination.”

I watch him settle into it. The quiet third chair’s gone—he’s running the show now, and the Lady’s sitting back to let him.

“The artifact’s lodged in a silted culvert beneath the east wing,” he continues. “Partially flooded, tight access routes, and some of the grate keys are missing because the workers who quit took them when they left. I’m working on recovering those keys, but in the meantime I’ll need to know your crew size, your equipment load, and whether your Ash-Seal liaison needs separate access or works embedded with your dredgers. You’ll report findings through me, I’ll handle access schedules and keep staff clear. The faster we can map crew movements and equipment staging, the faster you can begin work, and the faster that thing’s out of the water. What’s your crew’s standard operating procedure for contaminated salvage sites, and what do you need from me to make the first descent safe?”

I pull out my notebook—dog-eared, water-stained, pages crinkled from getting soaked and dried too many times. Flip it open to a clean page.

“Alright,” I say, pencil already moving. “You’re the key toad-man. Keymaster.”

I catch the faintest twitch at the corner of his mouth—not quite a smile, but close enough.

“We’re four dredgers, counting me. I wouldn’t count on the Ash-Seal fucker to venture into trouble with us—he hasn’t decided yet, as he wanted to know the details, but I’m guessing he’ll wait by the cart with his containment box for us to show up muddied and dragging the problem to him.”

I jot down a quick note about staging area, then look back up.

“My people are outside, waiting. Regarding standard operating procedure, need to know what tools to bring. Those missing keys, we don’t have time to wait for them. Will bolt cutters and saws do? Brought them with us, no problem carrying them. Just need to know if you can handle ruined grates.”

“Bolt cutters and saws will work—the grates are old ironwork, not secured against professional tools, and I’d rather you cut through than wait for keys that might not come back in time.”

I tap the pencil against the notebook.

“Also, artifact’s lodged in a silted culvert? Does it need to be dug up?”

Siltwell leans forward again, keeping that practical focus locked in.

“The artifact’s lodged in a collapsed culvert section, partially submerged in about two feet of contaminated water—silted channel, tight access, and yes, you’ll need to dig or dredge around it to get clean extraction leverage without cracking whatever’s keeping it sealed right now. Your four dredgers can stage from the east courtyard. I’ll have it cleared and your cart positioned there so your Ash-Seal liaison has clean line-of-sight to containment without needing to descend. I’ll walk you through the access route myself once we’re done here: down through the service stair, through the lower gallery, then into the construction zone where the culvert’s exposed. The flooded section’s maybe thirty feet from the access point, tight enough that your people will be working in close quarters with bad air and worse water.”

I raise my eyes to Siltwell, and let the look settle into something grave.

“Bossman had us bring muscle,” I say. “Are we dealing with beasties down there—the rabid or transformed kind—or does this artifact of yours just ruin our canal waters and mind-control people?”

“No beasties so far—no transformations, no rabid-kind threats, just the mental compulsion pull and the water rot. The workers who drowned walked in on their own, or slipped and didn’t fight to get back out, and the ones who got close reported headaches and intrusive whispers telling them to touch the flow or step into the channel. But I can’t promise the flooded zone’s safe from escalation. We don’t know what happens if someone stays submerged too long near the artifact, and contaminated sites have a way of getting worse once you start moving things. Your muscle’s a smart call—bring them, keep them close, and if anyone on your crew starts hearing whispers or staring at the water too long, pull them back topside immediately and don’t let them argue. The artifact’s not attacking people directly, but it’s pulling them in, and that’s dangerous enough when you’re working in tight quarters with bad air and two feet of tainted water underfoot. Treat it like the threat could escalate the moment you start extraction, and we’ll both sleep better once it’s in your Ash-Seal liaison’s containment box.”

“Alright,” I say. “Don’t need nothing more. I’ll get my crew up-to-date with this gods-awful shitshow, then flag down one of your servants when we’re ready.”

THE END

Perfect in the Ashes (Short Story)

Aldous’ kitchen sits in warm, dim light. Rough plaster walls, heavy timber beams, stone floor with salt worked into the cracks. Plain table against the left wall, two clay jugs on top. Tall cabinet on the far wall—open shelf with glass bottles.

We file in. Still wearing the chicken fight.

Bertram’s temple is stained with dried blood—chicken peck and self-inflicted pipe strike both. Aldous has tongues of dried blood down his arm. Vespera walks like her ass is on fire. Rill’s work tunic shows a bloom of blood at the chest.

Bertram plods to a stool, one hand over his temple like that’ll help. Sits down heavy.

“I don’t know about you folks, but I’ve had enough of chickens for a lifetime. I don’t even want to eat one for revenge.”

Vespera settles onto another stool with a careful wince, trying to keep weight off the wounded cheek.

“Alright, everyone survived the Great Chicken Apocalypse, but we’re all leaking in various places. Bertram, your temple looks like you lost a fight with your own pipe—which, to be fair, you did. Aldous, that arm needs cleaning. And Rill…” Her ears flick toward the girl. “…that’s a lot of blood soaking through. We should probably handle these wounds before they decide to get interesting in the bad way, meow.”

Can’t treat what’s got chicken shit in it.

“Need to clean these wounds.” I look at Aldous. “You keep vinegar in that cabinet?”

I cross to the cabinet, pull down a stoppered bottle from the shelf.

“Right,” Rill says. “Let’s get this done.”

She strips her work tunic off smooth, no hesitation. The chest wounds are visible now—punctures where the beaks found the soft spots, red and raw.

Aldous reaches for one of the clay jugs on the table, lifts it.

“There’s cider here if anyone wants it. Not much, but it’s clean.”

Bertram reaches for the other jug—the mead. Brings it to his nose. Sniff test. His eyes narrow when he lowers it. Pain flash.

“I’m glad you don’t mind if we help ourselves to your alcohol, friend.” He looks down at the salt worked into the floor cracks, even under the table. “And I must say, I owe you my apologies. I thought you were just eccentric. No harm in it. Gods know men like us who live alone for a long time get that way. But what made those chickens move… wasn’t whatever passes for mind in poultry.”

Vespera winces getting off her stool, approaches the wash basin.

“Melissa’s got the vinegar, but we need to rinse first—blood and gods-know-what needs to come off before disinfectant touches it.” She looks at Rill. “Come here. That chest wound took the worst of it, and you’re not doing anyone favors by pretending it’s fine. Let me clean it before Melissa works her vinegar magic.”

Rill crosses to the basin. Vespera works the cloth, methodical, gets the blood and chicken-shit off. The wounds look cleaner. Raw, but clean.

I move to Bertram with the vinegar jar. Head wounds bleed dramatic but they’re usually shallow. He’s coherent—all good signs.

“This is going to sting. Don’t jerk your head back.”

I tip the jar, let the vinegar soak into the wound. His fist goes white against the table edge. He bites his lip hard enough I can see the pressure, breathing through his nose to keep the expletives down.

I work it clean, watch for deeper damage signs. Pupils look normal. No confusion beyond the pain response. Shallow cut, like I thought.

Rill’s trying to treat her own chest wound now that Vespera rinsed it. Hands steady—adrenaline or stubbornness, hard to tell with her. She may have watched enough patchwork to know the theory. Clean, close, cover. Practice is different than theory. Her hands fumble the angle. Can’t see what she’s doing properly, can’t apply even pressure. The wound edges don’t meet right.

Aldous strips off his quilted jerkin. The bantam got his arm during extraction—shallow, but from a possessed bird. He’s standing there like he forgot he had his own wound until everyone else started getting treated.

Bertram takes a long pull from the mead jug, lowers it slow.

“Maybe I shouldn’t want to know, Aldous, but…” He looks at the potter. “You said whatever got into your chickens came from buried pottery. An ‘entity,’ you called it. What damnable thing did we just fight that found itself in our town?”

Vespera leans forward, ears swiveling toward Aldous.

“You’ve been hosting while bleeding, Aldous. Very hospitable, but let me take a look at that arm while you explain.” She gestures toward his wounded limb. “Sleeve needs to come up.”

Aldous is already moving to the basin. Rolls up the blood-stained sleeve on his left arm.

I move to Rill with the vinegar jar.

“Your turn. This’ll hurt worse than the rinse.”

She doesn’t blink. Just waits.

I tip the jar. Vinegar hits the punctures.

Her jaw locks hard. Fists clench. Breathing goes shallow and controlled, knuckles white against the burn. But she doesn’t jerk back, doesn’t make a sound. Just holds there while the vinegar works through raw tissue.

First serious wound she’s taken. From something that wanted to kill her. She’s not moving. Good.

Aldous starts rinsing his wound at the basin, water over the shallow bite.

“The entity came from something I buried. Eight years ago—piece of pottery from a failed firing. I thought burial would contain it. I was wrong.” His voice stays steady despite the sting. “The shard must have strengthened over time, reached out to the nearest living thing. By the time I dug it up and destroyed it properly, the corruption had already transferred into the hens. Living bodies anchor entities better than ceramic.”

He strips off his work shirt for better access to the wound.

“What you fought was something that shouldn’t exist—a contamination that moved from dead material into living hosts. That’s why extraction was necessary instead of slaughter. The birds weren’t the threat. They were just occupied.”

Bertram sets the mead jug back on the table. Then he looks at Aldous—long, grave stare.

“From a failed firing… eight years ago?” His voice drops. “You can’t mention ‘eight years ago’ and expect me not to know what that implies, my friend.” He rubs his temple where the wound is. Winces. “Did this entity have something to do with that sweet, studious apprentice of yours? What was her name…” Squints like recall’s harder with the head wound. “Mara, wasn’t it? First time you’ve referred to that year. Ever since.”

Vespera’s ears snap forward.

“Aldous, let me take a look at that arm while you tell us about Mara.” Her tone’s careful. “That kind of connection deserves the full story, meow.”

Bertram glances at her.

“I can see the bloodied hole in your breeches over your shapely ass right where that demon buried its beak, miss. Maybe you should let yourself be helped.”

Aldous’ arm needs disinfectant. Rinsed, exposed, accessible. Then closure. The wound’s not trivial—bantam peck, deeper than it looks. Blood loss makes people stupid. Infection risk is real. Vinegar will burn but he’s kept talking through worse today.

“Aldous. Hold still. Your turn.”

I move to him. Tip the vinegar over the wound, let it soak deep.

His jaw locks. Teeth grind—I can see the muscle flex. Fists clench white, breathing sharp through his nose. He holds still.

When I finish, he reaches for linen strips from the cabinet. Starts wrapping the wound himself. Hands steady despite the burn-ache.

“Yes. The entity came from Mara’s death.” First wrap secured. “Eight years ago I tried a ritual from a grimoire fragment I’d bought. Thought I was being careful, thought I understood the variables. I was wrong.” Another wrap. “The firing went catastrophically wrong and she died in the kiln fire. What came out of that kiln, other than burned shards, was my first functional containment vessel, sitting perfect in the ashes while she bled out on my workshop floor.”

He ties off the bandage. Small knot.

“So yes, Bertram—what you just helped me extract from those chickens has everything to do with my apprentice. Most of what I know about craft-based containment, I learned from the night she died.”

Bertram looks down at his lap. Lifts the clay jug to his lips, takes a longer gulp. Wipes his mouth with the back of his hand.

“That poor girl.” The edges of his eyes wrinkle. “Maybe I should say that… these things are not to be played around with. Whatever ‘entities’ exist out there that can be brought over through mysterious grimoires. But I guess… it happens. Despite our best intentions, life takes away the ones we care about.” He pauses. “Such a bright smile she had, that one.”

Vespera shifts her weight, ears flicking back.

“Right. Guess it’s my turn.”

She reaches back, works the torn breeches down over her ass. The wound’s exposed now—puncture, red, angry.

Bertram, seated behind her, makes a contemplative sound.

“Oh my. I can’t say I’ve seen many cat-folk butts in my long life, but yours is quite lovely, miss.”

Although Vespera’s tail twitches, she doesn’t turn around.

Last one needing disinfectant. Ass wounds are awkward but not complicated—muscle tissue, decent blood supply, low infection risk if treated properly. Vinegar will sting worse on tender flesh.

I cross to her with the jar.

“Vespera. This is going to burn.”

I tip it over the wound. Her spine goes rigid. Full-body shiver, tail jerking stiff. She sucks air through her teeth, claws flexing against the table edge. Holds still.

Rill’s trying to close her chest wound again. Hands working the angle, trying to bring the edges together. Can’t see what she’s doing. Fumbles the pressure. Won’t hold.

Aldous approaches her, methodical.

“Your wound’s been prepped correctly—rinsed and disinfected. Let me try to close it properly before infection sets in.” His voice stays level. “My medicine skill isn’t excellent, but the rooster got you helping with my problem. I owe you at least the attempt.”

Rill nods. He kneels beside her. Examines the punctures over her heart—copper-backed rooster hit the same spot twice. He reaches for linen strips, works the edges together carefully.

He tries to seat the cloth, then tries again. It slips. He pulls back, jaw tight, strips loose in his hands.

Bertram straightens. Sets the mead jug down on the table—solid thunk. Reaches behind his apron, extracts his pipe. He examines it like he’s checking for damage from the temple strike. Takes a long look at Rill.

“Kid, you did good. You went with us into that ambush. Kept holding tight to those chickens despite the bloom of blood in your chest. Despite the fact that you weren’t strong enough to prevent those feathered devils from escaping your grip. You’ve got grit is what I mean.”

He pauses. The pipe stays unlit in his fingers.

“Still… don’t know if that’s a good thing. There are worse things out there than possessed chickens, if you’re still willing to put your life on the line. Threadscar didn’t get her nickname from mopping floors, I’m guessing.”

Vespera shifts her weight, reaches down for the pooled breeches at her feet.

“Right, well. Can’t have a serious conversation about dead apprentices and entity corruption while my ass is hanging out. Not the aesthetic I was going for.”

She picks them up. Starts working them back over her hips, careful around the treated wound.

Rill’s chest wound is prepped—rinsed, disinfected, exposed. Both Aldous and Rill tried to close it already. Both failed. My turn. Rill’s young. Healthy tissue, good blood supply. Should respond well.

“Stay still. I’m closing this properly.”

I kneel and examine the punctures—rooster hit the same spot twice, over the heart. Worst wound of the group. Edges clean from the vinegar, good blood supply, no compromise visible.

I press the edges together—firm, even—and hold them while I seat the linen strip. Tension right, coverage right. I secure it and test the hold.

The bleeding’s checked, but nobody relaxes.

Aldous moves toward one of the empty wooden stools. Sits down careful, mindful of the arm wound.

“You all came here because I posted at the Registry about possessed chickens, and you stayed through an extraction that turned into a small battle.” His voice stays level. “I owe you more than cider. If anyone needs rest before heading back to town, the space is yours.”

Bertram produces a match, strikes his pipe. Flame catches. He lights the tobacco and takes a slow draw.

Smoke curls up. He’s watching Vespera work the vinegar-treated wound through the tear in her breeches.

“As for you, miss cat, I’m picturing a young life whole with fresh taverns in which to play, adventures to partake in.” Another puff. “Don’t know what brought you to our little nowhere-town, but I hope we didn’t make too bad of an impression on you. Possessed poultry and all.”

Vespera glances back toward the treated area.

“Melissa already handled the vinegar part—which hurt like absolute hell, by the way—so the wound’s disinfected. Let me see first if I can close this rooster wound properly.”

My hands are done. Now I watch.

Bertram’s managing his own pain—mead first, now pipe. Self-administered. Vespera’s struggling to handle her own closure attempt. Rill’s quiet, processing the first real wound she’s taken.

They’re talking about Mara again. Heavy conversation. Not my terrain. I patch bodies. I don’t patch guilt.

Bertram’s good at the social space. He reads people the way I read blood. I’ll watch for delayed shock. Infection signs. Anyone who destabilizes. That’s what I’m trained for.

The rest of it—the sharing, the bonding over tragedy—that’s their work.

THE END

Post-mortem for That Feathered Bastard

Read first the short story this post-mortem is about: That Feathered Bastard.

Through this cycle of fantasy stories, I’m exercising in tandem my two main passions in life: building systems and creating narratives. Every upcoming scenario, which turns into a short story, requires me to program new systems into my Living Narrative Engine, which is a browser-based platform for playing through immersive sims, RPGs and the likes. Long gone are the scenarios that solely required me to figure out how to move an actor from a location to another, or to pick up an item, or to read a book. Programming the systems so I could play through the chicken coop ambush involved about five days of constant work on the codebase. I’ve forgotten all that was necessary to add, but off the top of my head:

  • A completely new system for non-deterministic actions. Previously, all actions succeeded, given that the code has a very robust system for action discoverability: unless the context for the action is right, no actor can execute them to begin with. I needed a way for an actor to see “I can hit this bird, but my chances are 55%. I may not want to do this.” Once you have non-deterministic actions in a scenario, it becomes unpredictable, with the actors constantly having to maneuver a changing state, which reveals their character more.
  • I implemented numerous non-deterministic actions:
    • Striking targets with blunt weapons, swinging at targets with slashing weapons, thrusting piercing weapons at targets. None of those ended up taking part of this scenario, because the actors considered that keeping the birds alive was a priority, as Aldous intended.
    • Warding-related non-deterministic actions: drawing salt boundaries around corrupted targets (which Aldous said originally he was going to do, but the situation turned chaotic way too fast), and extracting spiritual corruption through an anchor, which Aldous did twice in the short.
    • Beak attacks, only available to entities whose body graphs have beak parts (so not only chickens, but griffins, krakens, etc.). This got plenty of use.
    • Throwing items at targets. Bertram relied on this one in a fury. I got clever with the code; the damage caused by a thrown weapon, when the damage type is not specified, is logarithmically determined by the item’s weight. So a pipe produces 1 unit of blunt damage, and throwing Vespera’s instrument case at birds (which I did plenty during testing) would cause significant damage. Fun fact: throwing an item could have produced a fumble (96-100 result on a 1-100 throw), and that would have hit a bystander. Humorous when throwing a pipe, not so much an axe.
    • Restraining targets, as well as the chance for restrained targets to free themselves. Both of these got plenty of use.
    • A corrupting gaze. It was attempted thrice, if I remember correctly, once by the main vector of corruption and the other by that creepy one with the crooked neck. If it had succeeded, it would have corrupted the human target, and Aldous would have had to extract it out of them as well. That could have been interesting, but I doubt it would have happened in the middle of chickens flying all over.
  • Implementing actions that cause damage meant that I needed to implement two new systems: health and damage. Both would rely on the extensive anatomy system, which produces anatomy graphs out of recipes. What I mean about that is that we have recipes for roosters, hens, cat-girls, men, women. You specify in the recipe if you want strong legs, long hair, firm ass cheeks, and you end up with a literal graph of connected body parts. Noses, hands, vaginas exist as their own entities in this system. They can individually suffer damage. I could have gone insane with this, as Dwarf Fortress does, simulating even individual finger segments and non-vital internal organs. I may do something similar some day if I don’t have anything better to do.
    • Health system: individual body parts have their own health levels. They can suffer different tiers of damage. They can bleed, be fractured, poisoned, burned, etc. At an overall health level of 10%, actors enter a dying state. Suffering critical damage on a vital organ can kill creatures outright. During testing there were situations in which a head was destroyed, but the brain was still functioning well enough, so no death.
    • Damage system: weapons declare their own damage types and the status effects that could be applied. Vespera’s theatrical rapier can pierce but also slash, with specific amounts of damage. Rill’s practice stick only does low blunt damage, but can fracture.

Having a proper health and damage system, their initial versions anyway, revealed something troubling: simple non-armored combat with slashing weapons can slice off limbs and random body parts with realistic ease. Whenever I get to scenes involving more serious stakes than a bunch of chickens, stories are going to be terrifyingly unpredictable. Oh, and when body parts are dismembered, a corresponding body part entity gets spawned at the location. That means that any actor can pick up a detached limb and throw it at someone.

Why go through all this trouble, other than the fact that I enjoy doing it and that it distracts me from the ocean of despair that surrounds me and that I can only ignore when I’m absorbed in a passion of mine? Well, over the many years of producing stories, what ended up boring me was that I went into a scene knowing all that was going to happen. Of course, I didn’t know the specifics of every paragraph, and most of the joy went into the execution of those sentences. But often I found myself looking up at the sequences of scenes to come, and it was like erecting a building that you already knew how it was going to end up looking. You start to wonder why even bother, when you can see it clearly in your mind.

And I’m not talking about that “plotter vs. pantser” dichotomy. Pantsing means you don’t know where you’re going, and all pantser stories, as far as I recall, devolve into messes that can’t be tied down neatly by the end. And of course they’re not going to go back and revise them to the necessary extent of making something coherent out of them. As much as I respect Cormac McCarthy, one of his best if not the best written novel of his, Suttree, is that kind of mess, which turns the whole thing into an episodic affair. An extremely vivid one that left many compelling, some harrowing, images in my brain, but still.

I needed the structure, with chance for deviation, but I also needed to be constantly surprised by the execution of a scene. I wanted to go into it with a plan, only for the plan to fail to survive the contact with the enemy. That’s where my Living Narrative Engine comes in. Now, when I experience a scene, I don’t know what the conversations are going to entail. I didn’t even come up with Aldous myself: Copperplate brought him up in the first scene when making up the details of the chicken contract. It was like that whole “Lalo didn’t send you” from Breaking Bad, which ended up producing a whole series. From that mention of Aldous, after an iterative process of making the guy interesting for myself, he ended up becoming a potter-exorcist I can respect.

I went into that chicken coop not knowing anything about what was going to happen other than the plan the characters themselves had. Would they overpower the chickens and extract the corruption out of them methodically with little resistance? Would any of the extraction attempts succeed? Would any actor fly into a rage, wield their weapons and start chopping off chicken limbs while Aldous complained? Would any of the characters suffer a nasty wound like, let’s say, a beak to the eye? I didn’t know, and that made the process of producing this scene thrilling.

Also, Vespera constantly failing at everything she tried, including two rare fumbles that sent her to the straw, was pure chance. It made for a more compelling scene from her POV; at one point I considered making Aldous the POV, as he had very intriguing internal processes.

Well, the scene wasn’t all thrilling. You see, after the natural ending when that feathered bastard pecked Vespera’s ass, the scene originally extended for damn near three-fourths of the original length. People constantly losing chickens, the rooster pecking at anyone in sight, Melissa getting frustrated with others failing to hold down the chickens, Rill doing her best to re-capture the chickens that kept wrenching free from her hold. Aldous even failed bad at two extractions and had to pick up the vessel again. It was a battle of attrition, which realistically would have been in real life. I ended up quitting, because I got the point: after a long, grueling, undignified struggle, the chickens are saved, the entity is contained in the vessel, and the actors exit back to the warm morning with their heads down, not willing to speak for a good while about what they endured.

Did the scene work? I’m not sure. It turned out chaotic, with its biggest flaw maybe the repetition of attempting to catch chickens only for them to evade capture. There were more instances of this in the original draft, which I cut out. I could say that the scene was meant to feel chaotic and frustrating, and while that’s true, that’s also the excuse of those that say “You thought my story was bad? Ah, but it was meant to be bad, so I succeeded!” Through producing that scene, editing it, and rereading it, I did get the feeling of being there in that chaotic situation, trying to realistically accomplish a difficult task when the targets of the task didn’t want it completed, so if any reader has felt like that, I guess that’s a success.

I have no idea what anyone reading this short story must have felt or thought about it, but it’s there now, and I’ll soon move out to envision the next scenario.

Anyway, here are some portraits for the characters involved:

Aldous, the potter-exorcist

Kink-necked black pullet

Slate-blue bantam

White-faced buff hen

Large speckled hen

Copper-backed rooster

Neural Pulse, Pt. 11 (Fiction)

In an electric flash and crackle, my muscles seized, and my vision flared white. As I crumpled backward like a dead weight, my left arm and the side of my head slammed into the control panel. My brain thrummed with electricity. It reeked of burning.

In the whiteness, the silhouette of a spacesuit materialized, looming over me. Several shadows clamped onto my arms with claws. One shadow dug its knees into my abdomen and crushed my face between its palms. I tried to scream, but only a ragged whimper escaped my throat. The tangle of shadows obscured my sight, swallowing me. A shadow snatched my hair and pulled; hundreds of points on my scalp prickled tight. Another shadow smothered my nose and mouth.

When I could feel my arms again, I lashed out at the shadows, thrashing as I braced myself against the control panel and the seat. I lunged for a silhouette—Mara’s spacesuit—but she sidestepped, and I plummeted onto the cockpit floor. A blow to the crown of my head plunged me into a murky confusion.

My wrists were bound behind my back—duct tape, I glimpsed, as Mara, crouched by my knees, finished wrapping my ankles. She straightened and hobbled backward. She stepped on the electroshock lance lying discarded on the floor and slipped, but the oxygen recycler clipped to the back of her suit arrested her fall as it struck the hatch.

Gauges of different shapes bulged on her belt like ammunition magazines. The suit’s chest inflated and deflated rhythmically. Mara unlatched her helmet and pulled it off, revealing her ashen face: mouth agape with baby-pink lips; livid, doubled bags under her eyes; strands of black hair plastered to her forehead with sweat. She leaned back against the hatch, gasping through her mouth, the corners glistening with saliva as she scrutinized me with intense, glazed eyes.

The cockpit reeked of sweat and burnt fuses. The shadows had congealed into a mass of human-shaped silhouettes, their hatred addling my brains, boiling me in a cauldron. Mara’s outline, as if traced with a thick black marker, pulsed and expanded.

No more anticipating how to defend myself, because I have you trapped. Thanks to you, the station doesn’t know we came down to the planet. With the tools of the xenobiologist you murdered, I will rip out your tongue, gouge out your eyes, bore into your face.

Mara crouched, setting her helmet on the floor. Exhaustion contorted her actress-like features, as if some illness burdened her with insomnia and pain.

“I thought I was marooned on this planet. I could have just called the station for rescue, but they’d fire me for nothing, and my pride would rather I suffocated than admit I needed help. Now I know—when we found the artifact, I should have tied you up then. Because you, being you, would just stick your nose right up to an alien machine that, for all you knew, could have detonated the outpost. And to understand what drove you to kill that xenobiologist, I imitated you. I stuck my nose up to that thing, and I saw my reflection. Now I know. Unfortunately, I know.” She regarded me like a comatose patient and waved a gloved palm. “Can you hear me? Did I scramble your brain?”

“I hear.”

My voice emerged as a rasp. I coughed. My mouth tasted of metal.

“And you understand?”

I nodded.

The black veil obscuring the cockpit stirred, rippling. Concentrated energy, like the air crackling before a storm. With Mara’s every gesture, the shadows shifted. Their bony claws crushed my thighs, cinching around my spine through suit, skin, and flesh.

A bead of sweat trickled down Mara’s forehead. She rubbed her face, swallowed. Her pupils constricted.

“Is that what you think? That I’ve convinced myself I’ve subdued you? That you’ll fool me until I let you go? That then you’ll finally strangle me? And even if the station calls it murder, no one will bother investigating, because most people who knew me would thank you for killing me.”

“I’m not thinking. When I try, my brain protests.”

Mara hunched down opposite me, reaching out to study the blow on my head, but halfway there her features pinched. She drew herself up, crossing her arms.

“I heard you telling me to come closer. Because you’ll break free, dig your nails into my corneas, and rip my jaw apart.”

My guts roiled; acid surged up my throat.

“You think I think things like that?”

“I feel this second consciousness… it betrays your thoughts as clearly as if you spoke them aloud. Maybe I’ll never understand how the artifact interfered with our minds, not just our language, but it’s a trick.”

I pushed my torso off the floor, sliding my back up the side of a seat inch by inch, trying not to provoke her, until my stomach settled. My head ached where she’d struck me. The throbbing in my skull clouded and inflamed my thoughts.

“You saw him. Jing. What I did.”

“I saw someone down there. I’d need dental records or DNA to be sure, but I trust elimination. I thought you’d claim it was an accident.”

“It was. I attacked the shadows. You feel them, don’t you?”

Mara took a deep breath.

“They’re pawing at me, trying to suffocate me. Products of my own besieged brain, I know, but I can hardly call them pleasant.”

“I wanted to keep it from affecting you. But at least now you understand.”

“Make no mistake. That xenobiologist is lying with his face beaten to a pulp in the second sublevel of an alien outpost because you are you.”

I pressed my lips together, erecting a wall against escaping words. I looked away from Mara’s eyes, concentrating on deepening my breaths. The muscles in my forearms were taut. Pain flared in my constricted wrists. This woman had fired an electroshock lance at me, beaten me, bound me, and now she was assaulting my character.

With her boot-tip, Mara nudged her helmet; it wobbled like a small boat.

“Although the jolts in my neurons, the shadows, and this other consciousness intruding in my mind unnerve me, the effect isn’t so different from how I’ve always felt around people. The two consciousnesses will learn to get along.”

“If you’re not exaggerating,” I said gravely, “I am truly sorry, Mara.”

She pushed damp strands of hair from her forehead and scrubbed it with the back of her glove, smudging it with dust. The corners of her lips sagged as if weights hung from them.

“Thanks for the sympathy.”

“Were you afraid I planned to do the same thing to you as I did to Jing?”

“Can you blame me for removing the opportunity?”

She limped heavily over to my seat and sat down sideways. As she leaned an elbow on the control panel, a shadow shoved my torso against the seat I leaned on; my lungs emptied. I shuddered, sinking into black water.

Mara had said we imagined the shadows, even if they affected us. I writhed onto my back, pushing with my heels until my head touched the cockpit hatch. My wrists throbbed, crushed tight. A shadow pressed down on my chest like someone sitting there, yet no physical presence had stopped me from moving. The artifact had hijacked my senses.

Mara regarded me from above, pale and cold like a queen enthroned.

“I wouldn’t have killed you,” I said. “You’re my friend.”

“Am I?”

Between the pulses of my headache, I tried to decipher her expression.

“To me, you are.”

“I like you. I tolerate you. But often, being around you feels like rolling in nettles, Kirochka.”

“Almost everything irritates you.”

“You’re incapable of seeing people as anything other than reflections of yourself. What you instinctively feel is right, you impose as right for everyone.” She shook her head, then leaned forward, her tone hardening as if she were tired of holding back. “You insist you have to drag me away from my interests, my studies, as if imitating your actions and hobbies would somehow make me impulsive and reckless too. Admit it or not, you think the rest of humanity are just primitive creatures evolving towards becoming you.” She jabbed a finger at her chest. “I need time to myself, Kirochka. Solitude. Reading. Designing one of my machines, or building it. You think people need to be prevented from thinking.”

Exhaustion was crushing me. I imagined another version of myself laughing, suggesting a drink or a movie, assuming Mara’s mood could be cured by a few laps in the pool. But my vision blurred. I blinked, swallowed to make my vocal cords obey.

“We’ve had good times.”

“The best were when I was enduring idiots and tolerating awful music.”

“You showed them you’re smart. Got half the tracking team to stop calling you ‘black dwarf’.”

“Yes, because those morons’ gossip was costing me sleep. You think I need to prove anything to them? They can believe whatever they want.”

Shadows crouched nearby, focusing their hatred on me, clawing at my skin, crushing my flesh with bony grips. They tormented me like chronic pain, but while Mara and I talked, I kept the torture submerged.

“Things went well for you, for a while, with that man you met. I don’t take credit, but would you have met him dining alone?”

The woman, deflated, blinked her glazed eye, rubbing it as if removing grit.

“You’re right. I miss things by focusing on research instead of acting like a savage. But I assure you, Kirochka, we’re too different for me ever to consider you a friend. Sooner or later, we’d stop tolerating each other.”

“We can bridge the differences.”

“You talk to fill silences. You pressure people for attention. You live for interaction. I could never sustain a friendship with someone like that.”

“Do you use me to get things?”

“Everyone uses everyone, if only to feel better about themselves. I just refrain from feeding illusions.” She drew herself up, as if recalling an injustice, and rebuked me with her eyes. “Besides, I didn’t stop running because I was lazy. I barely eat, and nobody’s chasing me in my apartment. Running bores me to death.”

“I wanted the company.”

Mara shook her head. Her tired gaze roamed the cockpit, as if seeing through the walls.

“When you called a few hours ago, I thought you wanted to drag me out drinking with you and the other pilots. I considered pretending I’d fallen asleep with the sound nullifier on. I should have.”

I contorted like a snake, sliding my back up the hatch. I leaned the oxygen recycler back, resting my head against the cool metal. Judging by the ache, when I undressed, my arms would be covered in lurid bruises.

“I consider you a friend. You listen when I need it. My professional peers, the ones who think they’re my friends, even my boyfriend—they’d tell me to shut up for ruining the mood.”

“When have you ever listened to me?”

“I want to. But I have to pry the words out of you.”

“Maybe that should have told you something, Kirochka.”

“That you hate me.”

She sighed, the effort seeming immense, like lifting a great weight.

“I don’t like human beings. I would have chosen to be anything else.”

Flashes on the communications monitor distracted me. Though Mara was still speaking, her words faded to a murmur beneath my notice. The headache pulsed, reddening my vision. Why did the monitor alert snag my attention? I snapped fully alert. It meant an incoming call.


Author’s note: I wrote this novella in Spanish about ten years ago. It’s contained in the collection titled Los dominios del emperador búho.

Today’s song is “Body Betrays Itself” by Pharmakon.

Neural Pulse, Pt. 10 (Fiction)

Paralyzed, I choked. I sucked in a lungful of hot air and collapsed to my knees before the xenobiologist. I pressed my hands against his suit’s chest. I pounded on him. No one would recognize Jing from what was left of his blood-drenched face. I stammered, repeating, “no, no, no,” while my fingers traced the helmet’s dents, the jagged shards of the broken visor jutting from the frame.

Pooling blood submerged the ruin of bone and flesh that was his face. When I tilted Jing’s body, the helmet spilled a tongue of blood onto the stone floor, slick with sliding globules of brain matter.

I staggered back, fists clenched, shuddering violently as if seized by frost.

Jing’s right hand was clamped around the handle of an automatic core drill. Perhaps the xenobiologist had approached to help me.

I shut my eyes, covered my visor with a palm. I pictured Jing standing beside me, an echo asking if I needed help. No, I hadn’t killed him. When I opened my eyes, the corpse lay sprawled on its side, the dented helmet cradling the ruin of his head.

Jing hadn’t known he was dealing with a live nuclear device. The flood of that feeling had swept over me. Had I seen the xenobiologist stop beside me? Had I decided to smash his face in with the crowbar?

I stumbled about, gasping for breath. My brain felt like it was on fire, seizing with electric spasms. Red webs pulsed at the edges of my vision, flaring brightly before fading. Before I knew it, I’d crossed the room that contained the construction robots, and was sprinting up the ramp. The oval beam of my flashlight jerked and warped, sliding over the protrusions and crevices of the rock face. My arms felt like spent rubber bands, especially the right, aching from fingertips to shoulder blades. Every balancing lurch, every push against the rock to keep climbing, intensified the ache.

I passed the first sublevel. My breath fogged the visor; I saw the flashlight beam dimly, as through a mist. My hair, pulled back at my nape, was soaked through, plastered to my skin.

I burst onto the surface, into the emptiness of the dome. I staggered, kicking through the sandy earth. I gasped for air and ran. I pictured myself training on a circuit—something that relaxed me at the academy after piloting, just as going to the gym with Mara relaxed me on the station—but now I was running from the consequences, from an earthquake tearing the earth apart like cloth. If I slowed, the fissure would overtake and swallow me.

I vaulted over the embankment to the left of the esplanade, where I’d hidden before, landing on my knees and one forearm. I scrambled backward, kicking up dirt, and pressed myself flat against the embankment’s exposed rock face.

The radio. I navigated the visor options until I muted my comm signal. When the notification confirmed I was off-frequency, I jammed my fists against my knees, my mouth stretched wide in a scream.

I drew a ragged breath. Beads of sweat dripped from my forehead onto the visor; the material wicked them away, like water hitting hot pavement. Mara would have reached the cockpit by now, found me missing. Nothing could make Jing’s death look like an accident. How would my friend look at me? What would she think when she found out? She’d think… because I killed the xenobiologist… I might kill her too.

I buried my helmeted head in my forearms. I welcomed the dimness. How had I let this happen? I knew I should have destroyed the artifact—just as I knew I had to fight back when those shadows grabbed me, tried to rip me open with their claws. I’d struck the shadows with the crowbar before I’d even consciously decided to. On other expeditions, while waiting for scientists and soldiers to emerge from some dense alien jungle, I’d monitor their radio chatter, trusting my instincts to warn me if I should suggest aborting the mission. Just as piloting was like flowing in a dance of thrust and gravity, the way dancing came naturally to others, I imagined. Now my instincts screamed at me to flee, to run from this embankment away from the ship, to strike out across the planet, heedless of survival. My instinct had been supplanted by another. And I knew the difference.

I peeked around the side of the embankment. The scarred esplanade remained deserted. The crystalline dome watched the minutes pass like some ancient ruin.

If Mara found out the artifact made me kill Jing, maybe she’d understand the danger, agree to destroy it. I was counting on her reasoning, on that cold logic that had so often irritated me. But if I waited too long to face her, she’d suspect my motives.

As I straightened up and stepped, dizzy, onto the esplanade, an electric spike lanced through my neurons, blurring my vision. I stumbled around until it subsided. I stopped before the central crater, hunching over to examine its charcoal-gray cracks and ridges. Crushed bones.

I activated the radio. The visor display indicated it was locking onto Mara’s signal. She’d see mine pop up, too, unless she was distracted. In the center of my darkened visor, the arctic-blue star shone through the thin atmosphere like a quivering ball of fluff.

“Where are you, Mara?”

“Cockpit.”

The shadows intercepted the transmission, projecting their hatred at me. It distracted me from Mara’s tone—was there suspicion coloring her voice? I waited a few seconds. Would she demand an explanation? Why was she silent?

“Good,” I said. “Stay there. I need to talk to you.”

As I climbed the slope skirting the hill towards the ship, the reality of my decision hit me. I was about to lock myself in the cockpit’s confined space with Mara. Her shadows would envelop me, sink their claws into my skin, force themselves down my throat to suffocate me. I wanted desperately to rip off my helmet, wipe the sweat from my face. I needed a shower, a moment to think.

I located the ship’s tower. Several meters ahead lay three cargo containers and scattered tools. Inside the cargo hold, chunks of the robots and the materializer were heaped like scrap in a landfill.

I scrambled up the boarding ladder to the airlock hatch. Opened it, scrambled inside, sealed it shut. The chamber pressurized with a series of hisses and puffs. I unsealed my helmet. Holding it upside down, steam poured out as if from a pot of fresh soup. I gulped the ship’s cool, filtered air and opened the inner door to the cockpit.

“Mara.”

Empty. Indicators blinked. On the monitors, ship status displays and sector topographical maps cycled. Lines of text scrolled.

My seat held a roll of electrical tape. As I turned it over in my fingers, an electric jolt made me clench my teeth, squeeze my eyes shut. My neurons hummed.

The door to the airlock chamber clicked shut with a heavy mechanical thud. The thick metal muffled the hissing. Leaning back against my seat’s headrest, still clutching the tape, I froze. The air grew heavy. The cockpit lights seemed to dim, the edges of my perception closing in. A dozen shadows waited in the airlock chamber, their concentrated beams of hatred probing the metal door, seeking to burn me.

The door slid open.

I tensed, lips parting. What could I possibly say?

Mara emerged sideways through the gap, head bowed. As she stepped through, she shouldered the door shut behind her. The glowing diodes and bright screens of the control panel glinted on her helmet’s visor. She whipped around to face me. Her right arm shot out, leveling an electroshock lance. The two silver prongs at its tip lunged like viper fangs.


Author’s note: I originally wrote this novella in Spanish about ten years ago. It’s contained in the collection titled Los dominios del emperador búho.

Neural Pulse, Pt. 9 (Fiction)

I edged a handspan of my helmet over the side of the embankment, to keep watch on the entrance of the shell of hexagonal panels. With the planet’s rotation, the star’s descending angle had lightened the blackness of the opening to a steel gray. I waited, lying prone, sunk a few centimeters into the sandy earth. From the gloom within the dome, I sensed the hollow vastness, the floor furrowed with the scars of ruts where maintenance robots had engraved circular tracks.

My helmet’s indicator notified me it had located Mara’s signal. I took a deep breath and waited for the woman to emerge. As if an army were cresting a hill, I sensed the shadows approaching. My heart hammered, and blood roared in my ears. I would stay out of sight.

From the gloom at the dome’s opening, a spacesuit frayed into view, venturing onto the esplanade, the containers following. I scooted sideways so the embankment hid me, and avoided breathing heavily lest the radio transmit it.

I peeked out. The woman and the containers had disappeared. And Jing? I had lost his signal.

Mara’s measured voice burst into my helmet.

“How goes it, Kirochka?”

I flinched, stirring the sandy earth, feeling the urge to leap up and sprint. Shadows were approaching from the opposite side of the embankment. They would surround me, press in on me, crush me against the earth until I suffocated.

“Something like that,” my voice trembled. “I’m in the cabin.”

“See you in a moment.”

What was keeping Jing? How could I wait for him to show himself? I had to seize the chance to break the artifact before Mara could stop me.

I scrambled up, slipping, spraying spadefuls of earth. I crossed the esplanade and plunged into the dome’s gloom. After descending the ramp about ten meters, I remembered to switch on my flashlight. I sprinted in a descending spiral, bracing a gloved palm when needed against the central pillar or the uneven rock wall. I filled my burning lungs with fresh, recycled air. My leg muscles throbbed.

A honey-colored light bathed me the instant I tripped. The maintenance robot tumbled through the air and bounced off the wall. I cartwheeled down the spiral, slamming against the excavated rock as my flashlight beam flared white off every surface my helmet struck. I slid prone down the ramp, bracing myself against the central pillar with my hands to stop.

I coughed. Sat up. My body’s tremors made the flashlight beam quiver. I shook the dust and sandy earth from my gloves. They were scuffed. Bristling fibers poked through the padding.

A chill ran through me from head to toe. I checked the oxygen levels on my lens. No leaks. On my vital signs display, my pulse fluctuated in the triple digits.

When I got up, I descended the ramp carefully, but within seconds, I was running. We had stolen the other robot, so I wouldn’t trip over that one.

The lens indicator alerted that it had locked onto Jing’s signal, and I slowed my pace. I breathed through my nose, but sweating as if in a jungle, I had to flare my nostrils to their limit to draw in enough air. I felt my way down the spiraling ramp.

I reached the entrance to a basement and peered in, exposing only a handspan of my helmet. I had expected to find the first sublevel, with the exposed mineral vein and the materializer, but I must have rolled past it tumbling downhill. Two of the construction robots lay gutted, and the third was missing an arm.

I hastened, walking just short of a run, to the back of the basement, where my flashlight beam mingled with the artifact’s tangle of levitating energy. I leaned against the curved, ribbed metal of a strut and scanned the entrance ramp. Perhaps Jing was dismantling the materializer on the first sublevel. Mara would have discovered I had deceived her.

I hunched before the undulating membranes of purple and pink energy. I probed the invisible shell containing the energy, as if hoping to find some crack through which to pry it open like a pistachio nut. I threw a punch, but the shell held. My hand ached as if I had struck a wall. When I gritted my teeth and struck again, a jolt shuddered up from my hand to my back.

I backed away. Bit my lower lip, refraining from growling. Jing would hear.

I took a running start and kicked the shell. It held. I kicked and kicked it until I slipped and fell flat on my ass. The radio would transmit my panting.

I swept the floor with my flashlight beam, searching for something that could help. I peered through the doorway to the adjacent basement area. Deserted. I ran to the dismembered ruins of the robots with their viscera of cables and circuits. Jing had left behind his crowbar and a meter. I gripped the crowbar.

I positioned myself in the middle of the basement and aimed my flashlight at the artifact. I brandished the crowbar, sprinted, and delivered a heavy blow against the shell, but the impact jarred the crowbar from my hand; it struck my shoulder and clattered to the floor. I trembled, seething. I hunched over, drew myself in, clenched my fists, and a growl escaped my lips, exploding into a guttural scream. My eardrums ached.

“Kirochka,” Jing said over the radio, startled. “Do you need help?”

I picked the crowbar up off the floor. I struck the artifact again and again, gasping for breath between each blow. The shell resisted as if, instead of being made of some penetrable material, I faced a repelling energy field. It would prevent me from breaking through, just as on a microscopic scale, atoms would never truly touch.

I leaned a forearm against the artifact, suppressing a gasp. Behind me, several shadows burst into the basement like an invading army through breaches in a rampart. I scrambled around the strut to my right, putting the artifact between myself and the spacesuited silhouette blocking the exit. My flashlight beam dazzled Jing, while his forced me to squint. The shadows coalesced into a wall, blocking my escape.

Here you are, of course. Acting on your own, against the majority decision. When I met you, I sensed you were unbalanced. That thing has damaged you because you’re too stupid to realize you should keep your distance from an unknown object, and now you intend to deprive humanity of a discovery that could lead to unimaginable technologies. You’re a miserable egoist, whatever your name is. An idiot who can barely pilot, clinging to that frigid scientist because no one else would bother paying you any attention.

I lashed the artifact with the crowbar. The phalanges of my hand screamed as if the blows had opened some fissure, yet I struck and struck again.

Out of the corner of my eye, I glimpsed Jing circling the artifact. I was dizzy, short of breath. The shadows flowed together shoulder to shoulder, hemming me in between them and the infinite volume of rock at my back.

A jolt shook my neurons, bleached my vision white. I shook my head. I pressed the tip of the crowbar against the invisible shell and, trembling down to my toes, leaned my weight onto the artifact as if I could force open a crack through which that tangle of energy would spill.

“You’ll break it, despite what your colleague decided,” Jing said.

“No, I’m just hitting it with the crowbar to see if it sounds like a gong.”

“You were right. Taking the artifact to the station would be madness. It should stay here, studied only by a small group of scientists, in quarantine. Never mind who gets the credit. But if you break it… maybe you’ll prevent a disaster.”

I coughed, spraying the inside of my visor with saliva. The air inside my helmet had grown sauna-hot, and my body was slick with sweat. I gripped the crowbar with both hands, spread my legs to brace myself, and lashed the shell. Each blow resonated through the fibers of my arms, making them vibrate like taut strings.

Deafened by a torrent of noise from which screams and roars emerged, the shadows surged against me. They climbed onto my back, pressed me down against the artifact. Through the suit, their bony claws seized my thighs, dug into my breasts, clamped against my head like a vise, probed my mouth, clawed at my uvula. I roared and lashed at the shadows again and again. With each impact, my arm muscles caught fire.

The shadows flew away from me at tens of kilometers per hour, as if ejected into space during a decompression. I stood on two trembling legs. My vision had clouded red. The crowbar hung from the end of my limp right arm, and when I let it fall, it bounced with a muffled thud.

The red haze was evaporating. I blinked, panting. Sweat dripped onto the smoked lens as the material struggled to defog. I leaned against the artifact’s invisible shell, which supported me solid as no object humans could ever build.

My vision cleared. Jing lay supine on the floor, his visor shattered. Behind the breach in the dented helmet, an eyeball had sunk into a gory mass of black hair strands, pulped flesh, cartilage, and bone. Chocolate-brown blood had spattered the rock and welled from the pulp of his face as if from a sponge, filling the helmet’s bucket.


Author’s note: I wrote this novella in Spanish about ten years ago. It’s contained in the collection titled Los dominios del emperador búho.

Today’s song is “Gyroscope” by Boards of Canada.

The Scrap Colossus, Pt. 19 (Fiction)

Hunger and sex tingling at the base of my skull, I set the excerpt beside me on the eroded, lichen-stained stone blocks. The roar of a passing car from the abutting road faded, allowing the chorus of birds to swell in a contest of chirps and warbles. Through the gap between two dilapidated walls, the nearest apartment building emerged, its bricks a medley of rust red, chocolate brown, and burnt orange. The windows reflected the sun’s warm glow. Over a balcony’s parapet, a woman’s bust, wearing a blue robe, watered a row of potted plants, her wet, dark hair gleaming as if lacquered. Overhead, puffy clouds stretched across an azure canvas, drifting slowly by like towering snowdrifts. A wash of sunlight bathed the world, but the undersides of some clouds had darkened from a ghostly white to a charcoal gray.

“Gorgeous, isn’t it?” Elena said in a measured tone. “Gigantic cotton balls in creative and unique shapes, suspended who knows how many kilometers above our heads. A painting ready to be rendered. Our lives look so tiny and lackluster compared to nature. Have we really improved much from the days when we lay in a field and stared at the sky? And at night? We’ve never seen those stars our ancestors took for granted. We never learned the stories they read in those constellations. Besides, imagine the amount of UFOs they must’ve witnessed zipping around up there, without comprehending what the fuck they were looking at.”

“As if we understand. By the way, iron age life expectancy hovered around twenty years. Half of children didn’t make it to puberty. Trepanning was used as a cure for migraines. People died from a mild infection, or from shitting. There were no books, no movies, no computers, and you were lucky if you had a wooden horse, and a piece of hard bread to gnaw at.”

Elena had crossed her alabaster ankles, smooth skin revealed beneath the hems of her black joggers, that had slipped up the shins as she reclined in the lawn chair. The pack of cookies rested on her lap. Her pallid face bloomed in the sunlight like an unfurled moonflower. I beheld a quasi-mythical creature, rare as the sight of a narwhal’s tooth cleaving the surface of the Arctic Ocean.

“Well, aren’t you full of facts? You’ll explode like a piñata. But you’re right. Most people’s lives throughout the ages were wasted in perpetual crises. And here we are, wasting our lives in the midst of supposed plenty, and still suffering.” She shifted in the chair, the plastic strips creaking as she brushed cookie crumbs off her hoodie. Her pale blues searched my face anxiously. “Come on, blurt it out. You know I’m waiting for the verdict.”

“I’m still coming to my senses. Let’s recap: a man and a woman locked in a relationship without the slightest interference. He refuses to leave that secluded clearing because the outside world is… meaningless and hostile. Worse than the risk of starvation. Their relationship is as co-dependent as that of a parasite and host, and maybe I should be disturbed by the cannibalism, but… reverting to a primal state, losing yourself in intimacy with the sole existence that matters in the universe, feels holy to me.”

Elena’s gaze slid down to her fingers clutching the pack of chocolate cookies. The inner corners of her blonde eyebrows slanted upwards. As if she had won a struggle with herself, her pale blues snapped up and locked with my eyes. Her mouth curved into an impish smile.

“What deeper connection could exist, what greater intimacy and trust, than allowing your beloved to tear out and devour pieces of your body?”

“Yeah. Remind me to never stick my dick in your mouth.”

After an explosive “pfft,” Elena erupted into a hearty laugh—a wild blend of a crow’s cawing and a hyena’s yapping—that rattled her shoulders. Doubled over, she let her head slump between her arms while her almond-blonde hair shimmered like spun gold in the sunlight. She raised her head, revealing her cheeks flushed pink. I couldn’t help but grin. As her laughter dwindled into a chuckle, she leaned to the side and plunged a hand into her open backpack. With a crisp crinkle of plastic, Elena fished out the bag of salted peanuts and lobbed it at me. I caught it by pressing the bag against my chest.

“Is this your way of telling me to stuff my own mouth?”

“You need to eat. You were starving yourself while you read about a guy feasting on his girl. At least nibble on some nuts, you big, bearded weirdo.”

I shrugged, then tore the bag open, unleashing the scent of salty, roasted peanuts. I poured a handful and shoved them into my mouth. My taste buds tingled with salt as I crunched down the nuts. Elena picked up a cookie from the pack on her lap and bit it in half, her head tilted back slightly, exposing her throat as she studied me.

“Allow me to ruin the moment,” I said, “by bringing up that being eaten alive must be one of the most horrifying ways to die. I read about a teenager, I think in Russia, who texted her mother as a family of bears were gorging themselves on her flesh, and I wish I could scrub that shit out of my brain.”

Elena swallowed. A shadow passed over her face despite the sunlight streaming down.

“I read that too. Funny how we cling to such horrific stories. Like picking at scabs. We can’t wait for the apocalypse, huh? Maybe we’ll get to chew on each other. Yeah, I doubt I meant the cannibalism literally. It’s more of… what would you call it? A metaphor?”

“Or a symbol.”

“Well, who the fuck cares about the labels academicians slap on things. What matters is the experience. I didn’t come up with that particular element of the story, though. My monster presented it to me, as in, ‘Oh, you should have the narrator feed from that lagoon woman for nourishment,’ and I went along. Felt right.”

Elena wedged the rest of the cookie into her mouth. I tossed another handful of peanuts into mine.

“At a middle level of meaning,” Elena continued, her voice distorted by cookie chunks, “I suppose it relates to how I imagine complete intimacy: letting someone peel away all the layers of yourself, exposing what you try to conceal, the parts that disgust and shame you, and learning they can accept those too. Most people can’t handle seeing what’s beneath someone else’s skin, let alone consuming it. They want sanitized relationships that don’t make them question their own humanity. No dirt, no grime, no stink. But in that clearing… that’s what love might look like if we stripped away the social conditioning that turns us into dishonest creatures, instead of the wild animals we really are. Neither of them is trying to change the other. The narrator accepts that she needs to submerge in stagnant water for dozens of minutes at a time, and return to his embrace soaking wet and covered in pond scum. And she accepted him from the moment he stepped into that clearing. Two people finding comfort in their shared fucked-up-ness. Cannibalism as communion. Total surrender. She’d rather be devoured piece by piece than let him leave. And he’d rather starve than return to a world that doesn’t contain her.”

Elena’s features twisted in tension—brows knotted and lips pursed as if battling an internal pressure. She had hunched slightly, shoulders drawn inward. Her expression melted, and she pressed a hand against her stomach.

“Almost burped. I don’t know why I eat these cookies. They always make me feel bloated.”

“Is that what you want?”

“Is what what I want?”

“To live in isolation with someone who loves you.”

She whipped her head to stare at me with wide, naked eyes, her lips parted. I had never witnessed her speechless, as if she had short-circuited. When the power flickered back to those pale blues, Elena averted her gaze and fiddled with the zipper of her hoodie.

“Straight to the point, huh? Bold motherfucker.”

“And I expect a bold answer.”

Elena reached down for the carton of orange juice, unscrewed the cap, and guzzled, her throat contracting as she swallowed. After setting the carton on the ground, she fixated on the eroded stones beside me rather than meeting my eyes. Her upper lip glistened from moisture.

“I guess you expect me to say that I want to be with someone who sees the real me, who shows me how it feels to be loved and accepted. Who makes me feel less alone in the world. Sadly, I was tempted to pretend I haven’t fantasized about that, but the ghosts in my daydreams aren’t flesh and blood, which means I can spend eternity in their company.”

“And shape them to your liking.”

“Sure. They can’t leave. They can’t disappoint me.”

“Or hurt you.”

Elena’s pale blues flicked up to my face, then away, as her shoulders stiffened.

“Listen, Jon. When real humans are involved, my body, my brain, they react in predictable ways. As if those people and I belonged to separate species. A relationship that works in my imagination would turn unbearable in person. I’d grow to hate their voice, their breath, their smell, the sound of them breathing. To the extent that I’d want to strangle them. I’d unconsciously push them away until they gave up on me. And I’m not sure I’m capable of loving someone. I can’t even stand myself.” Elena exhaled, then rubbed her eyelids as if to hide in that darkness. “To survive, we tell ourselves stories about how we’d love to spend our limited lives, but it all boils down to how you’re wired, how your neurological makeup processes reality. And to me, it feels like a nonsensical succession of bristly, abrasive stimuli. Add in the horror of inhabiting a mortal body. Your skin itches, your guts twist, your head aches. In constant conflict with the sack of flesh and bones you’re forced to nourish and maintain. Pissing and shitting and horking snot and vomiting, bleeding out every month if you’ve got a cunt, then menopause and wrinkles and everything sagging to shit. I’d rather free my consciousness from this monkey suit and install it in a robotic body that would allow me to modulate sensory input, or even turn it off. Instead, I’m trapped in a puppet of decaying meat colonized by trillions of microbes. And it will fail on you one day, you know. Despite everything you’ve sacrificed, it will betray you. At the very least, your neurons will fry and you’ll lose track of where and who you are. And in the end, the Earth, the sun, the universe itself will succumb to entropy, so none of it matters. What a nightmare. If my brain hadn’t been shaped so strangely, maybe I wouldn’t feel trapped in this miserable hellhole of a world. All I see in the mirror is a broken, twisted, parasitic organism doomed to an eternity of solitude. Might be the least she deserves for being defective and bringing misery to others.”

“You have a right to be happy, Elena. Try to extract as much joy from this nonsense as you can.”

Elena dropped the cookie pack into her backpack before curling into herself, hugging her knees to her chest. The parallel white stripes rippled along the creased fabric of her joggers, evoking a flag fluttering in the breeze. Her tired eyes, stark against the dark shadows beneath them, locked onto me with an unblinking intensity.

“Let me get to the point, Johnny. That story was inspired by something stronger than love. Something that has kept me alive despite my longing for death.”

“Stronger than love, huh?”

“Oh, yes. Like a black hole to a star. A force of nature that warps the fabric of reality. A gravitational pull that can’t be resisted or escaped, that bends the light of the stars and the flow of time. Want to hear the details?”

“I want to hear everything about you. Lay it on me.”

“What a gracious gentleman. Well, let me bring you back to the days when I worked as bookstore clerk, or whatever the fuck they call that. In Gros. That daily sacrifice to the gods of the rat race for the sole purpose of amassing money, a purpose to which we’re born enslaved. Anyway, I include the hour-long commute each way in crowded buses and trains. How many times did some motherfucker rip a fart, forcing everyone in the vicinity to inhale his putrid gases? A wafting shit mist that clung to the inside of your nostrils.” Elena rubbed her face with her palms. “Let’s move on. Whenever I stocked the shelves, or dealt with my coworkers and customers, or just sat in the back room with my face in my hands, I yearned to hide from this world that grinds us into dust, that demands we participate in its meaningless rituals until we’re hollowed out. I longed to escape to a secluded place where I could be my true self, where no one would find me and drag me back. Once you know that such a sanctuary exists, even in your imagination, the tiny, sterile reality you’ve been confined to from birth asphyxiates you. I’ve been there, Jon. In that secluded clearing. Not literally eating people, obviously—although my intrusive thoughts love to provide detailed instructions from time to time. Inside that sanctuary, the mere thought of returning to the cold machinery of society made my blood curdle.” She rested her chin on her knees, her pale blues vacant as if gazing into another dimension. “I’ll open up about something hard for me to articulate. I’ve never before attempted to put it into words. But that’s the point of these meetings, right?” Elena’s fingers dug into her kneecaps. She closed her eyes, her features strained. “In that sanctuary, I was rarely alone. You could say I retreated to the clearing to meet someone. A presence that had become more real than my own body. Whose words mattered more than food, or air, or sunlight. Whose existence justified mine. Whose essence, freely shared, I consumed, trying to transform myself into someone deserving of her gifts. She was the reason I kept going, the reason I woke up every morning. Because I knew she’d be there.”

Elena’s breath hitched. We had stepped past her writing onto the jagged brink of an unhealed wound. Her furrowed brows and the tension around her mouth betrayed her struggle to remain in control.

“You were in love, then,” I said. “Who’s the lucky woman?”

Her chest heaved as she inhaled deeply. After opening her eyes, she locked a piercing gaze on me as if punishing herself. Those pale blues, haunted by a beast’s sorrow, gleamed with a liquid sheen that pooled at the waterline. A glistening crystal bead spilled over and clung to the lashes.

“I… I can’t, Jon,” she said in a ragged voice. “Now, I cannot.”

“No pressure. You don’t owe me anything, Elena. Least of all your pain.”

“I would never call it love. You have to understand. She made my existence bearable. I yearned to take her inside me so utterly that the boundaries of our selves would dissolve, and she would flow through my veins and seep into my bones. I knew that returning daily to her presence would… But what was the alternative? Streetlights and vending machines? The rest of the world is noise. I’d rather be consumed by something meaningful. Even if it destroys me. No, especially if it does.”

From the shadows under Elena’s brows, her eyes still reflected the sunlight as she averted her gaze. Her lashes swallowed the solitary tear.

“I hate slapping labels on things. Words are crude trade-offs in which to cram whole universes of meaning. In some cases, people cage those meanings into words precisely to lock them away. But human beings can’t pour the contents of their minds into other skulls, hence the insufficient, clumsy tool of language. Let me use the dreaded O-word to sum it up.”

“Which one? Oblivion? Onanism?”

Elena’s eyes snapped back to me. Her lips stretched into a wry smile.

“Obsession, you dickhead. It lacks the dignity and respectability of love, but it’s got teeth. And claws. Sharp ones that sink into your brain and won’t let go. When you’re obsessed, you don’t need to be loved in return. You’re content to feed off scraps. Back to the lagoon woman, I needed her identity to stay a mystery. I thought of her as a black hole, an unknowable singularity. Anyone approaching her would get sucked in and distorted beyond recognition. A mind warping around a mind warping around a mind.”

After rubbing her hands on her joggers, Elena lowered her feet to the ground and leaned forward to seize the carton of Don Simón. She unscrewed the cap, then drained the container dry as it dented in her grip. She screwed the cap back on and stuffed the empty carton into her backpack.

“You know, years ago, a therapist told me I couldn’t possibly feel soothed by my obsessions. Their bible—the DSM—didn’t allow it, at least as it came to the OCD label she intended to staple onto my poor, troubled head. I wish I had told her to fuck off. Don’t get me wrong… My obsessions have contaminated me. But worse, I feared that my fondling and drooling might taint their purity.” She sighed and shook her head. “There’s no way to sugarcoat this, Johnny: I’m the most obsessive person I’ve ever known. Outside of those you only find out about because…” Her voice grew brittle, on the brink of cracking. “Because they walk up to their idol and stab them in the heart.”


Author’s note: today’s song is “Hotel California” by Eagles.